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l.S. Military IH*fatorKlii| Plamu'd
PALM BEACH Libert} Lobby, a Washington-bas d i :
i. ization, has begun a fund-raisii npa I inance a
rtt 1 ng-rangi plan for a right-wing military d i1 i ship ii I
I"i Si B ian n H Epstein, national director of the Anti-
ID Famai in u? ol B*n I B'rith has disclosed. The Lobby, char-
1 as a right l pressure *rnup with nember-
. i ind snppoi't, Buccei led In raising large stuns of money for
i i in election campaigns in 1968 and 1970, At a top securit)
meeting Nov. -'-' in New York, the plan labelled "Operation Sur-
vival.' was ipelled out by Roberi M. Kartell. Liberty Lobby's Bpe-
c l project coordinator, who told the selected guests that Liiierty
Lobby is already in the process of surveying the Army to develop
friends and contended th.it a right-wing military dictatorship is
i.,,-., -i save the tuntrj from takeover by Communist and
radii al k I elements.
1DL Announces Boycott
NEW YORK IWNSi Rabbi Men- Kahane, national chairman
nf the Jewish Defense League, has announced that his organization
will boycott American companies doing business with the Soviet
Cninn and will conduct "non-vio!"iit actions" against organizations
engaged in cultural exchange programs with the USSR. Earlier,
he had announced an "indefinite moratorium" on harassment of
Soviet officials and their families because 'contacts' in the govern-
ment and American Jewish organizations had assured him that JDL
had made its point.
rompufor Experts To Moot
IERUSALEM (WNSl Computer experts from everj
nent will attend the Jerusalem Conference on Information T..
ogy here Aug. 16-20. The conference, to be headed by Pn
I'm: n of the University of California, will se k ways of putting the
tronic maehii Into the servio ol developing countries. It is
hoped th i rcsul th. < inference, Israel's computer abilitj ivill
known throughout the world. The first Isra "11 computi is
built at the Wi ai Institute of Science 15 yean igo. Today two
I ... imrfactun I ind comp rnent syst. ms a;; I
an itl mps '
Rosenwassor Still Captivo
.!. AVIV iJTA i ivasser, a 50-j I 'h-
Mel Israel's
irder I> I. 19< I tivity. Last fi\
to his family, v v lives in a
vi'.)age H Israel's Red Ma i
i th International Red Cross
i ttcr
. ..,,.-, del x- I al thi s ime tin* The Jew sh
phii Agenc; learn, i Rosenwasser has received letters
family.
Ambassador Kitlnap Target?
JERUSALEM IJTA' I- tel's ambassador to Brsail, Yitzh
Ilarkat i, was given unua tal s< curlty coverage at the Rio de Janeiro
airport last week because it was suspected he was one of the kid-
n tplng tar* ts of the Brazilian underground, the Jewish Telegraphic
Agency has learned. He flew here with his family to avoid the
possibility of abduction, Similar action was taken by the Dutch
ambassador, who left Incognito. The Brazilian terrorists have been
encouraaed bv their success in obtaining the release of some 70 of
their fellows in return for the life of Swiss Ambassador Giovanni
Enrico Bucher. It was expected they would attempt additional kid-
naping*, and Harkavj was believed to be high on their list.
Il'nai B'rith Women Convene
WASHINGTON D.C. Some 700 Women delegates, volun-
teers from the United States. Canada, Israel, South America and
Europe, will convene here in the nations capital Feb. 14-1. for top
level decision making at their International Triennial Ce.nvent.on
and 75th Anniversary. The them.- of the convention will bo Invita-
tion to Greatness" and the emphasis will ho on the role and re-
sponsibUity of women m today's world. The convention will open
Sunday evening with keynoter Rita Hauser, US. ftepresent
on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, addressing
the wo-,,,, on "The Prospects for Human Rights in the World
Today."
Supromo Court To Review Case
WASHINGTON OTA' The United States Supreme Court
has agreed to review the question of whether an employer can dls-
i .,. rker who refuses to work on a cert .In das or at certain
times because to do so would violate his religious P**;
case under review, Dewej vs. Reynolds Metal Co., h"-** bj
the National Jewish Commission on Law and Public Affairs
(COLPA). The brief requesting the Supreme Court to review the
lower court's decision was written by Nathan Lew.,
ton. DC. vice president ol COLPA, who will r ''
of the eas,. before the Supreme C turt.
Jarring To Initiate
Cease-Fire Extension
By Special Report
UNITED NATH >NS. N.Y.
According to authoritative dlp-
I matic sources here, the U.N.'s
Middle East peace mediator, Dr.
Dr. William A. Wexler, presi-
dent of B'nai B'rith, has been
reelected to a second one-year
term as chairman ot the Con-
ference of Presidents of Major
American Jewish Organizations.
The Conference, comprised of
25 national J ewi'-h organiza-
tions, is a coalition agency
which acts cooperatively on
matters afffecting the security
and wellbing cf Jew 3 through-
cut the world.
Problem Posed In
So. Africa Schools
By Officials' Edict
JOHANNl SI iURG U 1 'A
,i... nt i in C ipe Province
h e e been n Ivia 1 bj commun-
itj I. aders t i invoke th. ir righl
to request that their be
, .. i- mI fron Set ipture less ns
the stats s rlt ols wh ch h ive
just been revised by official e licl
so as to Implant Christian doc-
trinal teachings.
Scripture lessons have always
been part of the state school cur-
riculum, but in the past have
covered the Old and New Tes-
t tments in a broad and general
way. A new regulation provides
that the lessons shall henceforth
"prepare the pupil ... to accept
Jesus Christ as his personal
Savior."
A deputation of the South
African Jewish Board of Depu-
ties, headed bv Sydney Walt.
brought the matter to the atten-
tion of S. Theron. Director of
Education at Cape Province.
They pointed out that the new
approach to religious Instruction
presents a serious problem in
regard lo Jewish children being
exposed to such instruction." and
noted that "teaching of this na-
ture, however satisfactory from
B Christian point of view, could
not he acceptable to an adherent
of Judaism."
The Jewish Telegraphic Agen-
cv learned that the deputation
was received sympath "ticallv.
The Board s ild it felt it w
dutj to Inform Jewish parents
of the new syllabus and advise
th. m to Inv >ke their
to reauest
excus. I and Thcroi -
n. objection.
Gunnar V. Jarring, v ill ii I il
mow s to e\t. nd the ci aa
11 yond the Feb. 5 expiral ion
date in \ lew i i Israi I's 11 ply
this week to the latest Egyptian
note.
It was revealed that the new
note dratted by Premier Golda
Meir and Foreign Minister Abba
Kban contains the word "with-
drawal" and Ls intended to re-
fute Egypt's contention that
Israel refuses to accept the prin-
ciple of withdrawal and is bent
on expansion.
The new Israeli note is said to
seek clarification on several
points. One cf the main items
they want spelled out is Egypt's
offer of freedom of navigation
through international waterways
an area where Israel has had
much trouble in the past.
The Israeli government re-
portedly is unhappy about the
I nhlleltj given < aim's most re-
cent proposals, and will insist on
"quiet diploma**?"meaning no
leaks to news media of the t*OU-
tents ot notes exchanged in the
Jarring tains.
While Egyi t's n ply w s not
coi siden d si IIsfactory '
avoided replying to the prlnclp il
clauses in the Israeli note' tl
government will continue to par-
sue a peace s. til, mi nt tin
the Jarring machinery, infoi
sources said.
Dr. Jarring is now said to be
actively trying to promoti
agreement. He is expected I i
make a progri ss report to U.N.
Secretary-General U Thant, who
presumably will forward it to
the Securit;, Council and ask for
the ceasefire extl nsion.
It has been learned that h-
Continud on P*.'/< 9-A
Record Budget Adopted By
ORT At Annual Conference
NEW YORK IJTAi A rec-
i.;.i of $21,840,000 w w
,. i :> the American ORT
.-. at ;- 19th n
inference here in i
porl if si pped-up prog, im of
lid and educat
and \ m- lion il sen ;". s in I
Jewish communitii '
ami
Dr. Willi im Hal wh i
reelected president, dc
th mi- sum -.v s nee Ic l to
. ssential n ic. I i
than 60,000 persons dur-
:i: 1971. The record figu e
I rove I by more than 600 com. i -
tes, was $2 million
more than last year and h
used pi imarily for exp insion in
Israel pnd for ORT facilities in
Iran, France, India and Latin
America.
(.en. Ratal Herrog. president
ef ORT Israel, announced that
the country's network of more
than '"> ORT flvhnieal high
schools had agreed to enlarge
enrollment i>> >' l**t 1.000
more students in the nevl few
years.
A c >m
to prividi x
youth in V\ -' B nl
in Gazj ivill be i si
I j OUT a: lie
Mil str> of I. b >r an
bj ih I- 'a. '
was u
Aral' youth in East J.
-
enlari
The del. it. pproved i ns
to establish, jointly w I
! [. br w Ui h 'i sitj. i '
technical in Jerus i
and the ci it on of at Ii
other technlc il colleges In Is
as well as a new school for gli Is
of the Jewish community in
bay, India, a computer InstltUt
for the Jewish youth of Buen is
Aires and higher level studies at
the ORT schools in Morocco and
France.

'Jewish Survival Legion'
To Stay Within The Law
NEW YORK (JTA) Several
thousand persons, disturbed by
the militant tactics employed
by the Jewish Defense League,
have formed a new organization
called the "Jewish Survival Le-
gion" which is dedicated to the
solution of problems attacked
by the JDL, "within the frame-
work of the law."
The four main problems the
JSL Will I e concerned with, Be-
ing to one of its founders.
Allan Mallenbaum, are the pro-
tection of Jewish life and prop-
erty iii urban areas, aiding So-
viet J w ry, supporting Israel,
and reversing the identity crisis
facing alienated Jewish youth.
Mi Mi llenbaum is i
number of JDL leaders who re-
signed In the wake of violence
attributed to the JDL organiza-
tion, and he predicts that many
more resignations can be ex-
p. cted, but he also declared that
Ids group would not attempt to
undermined JDL's influence.
The "least forceful methods
tsary to accomplish each ol
its objectives will be used." Mr.
Mallenbaum declared, explaining
that this means acting within
the established framework of
the government and using politi-
cal, legal, economic, educal i
and defensive measures act
ing to the requirements
situation and in COOpei
with both Jewish and
Jewish groups,

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Phone JE 1-0749
tiji.iti Pracr ptiona Fl
CONTACT LENSES
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HELP DOUGLAS GARDENS
WITHOUT SPENDING A DIME!
Funds earned by the Jewish Home for the Aged
Thrift Shop at 7300 N.W. 27th Avenue, in Miami,
are an important part of the Home's operating
income.
Won't you help the Home todav by contributing
items for resale at the Thrift Shop?
Do you have furniture, appliances, bedding,
cameras, clothing, sporting goods or any other
saleable merchandise which you no longer need
or can use?
Do you know someone, a friend or a neighbor,
who is redecoratinq? Pe-haps a hotel, an apart-
ment house. Tell them about our Thrift Shop.
Douglas Gardens has serirus financial needs,
since 80^ of its 222 residents are pubiic welfare
recipients. With increased cpe-ating costs, and
public assistance payments in Florida the lowest
of a!! s'r'es, thD Home u*oer>t!y needs ycur help
to maintain iv- ^'rS quality care. May we count
on your support?
Just phone 695-2101 and arrange fcr our truck
to pick up your merchandise.
And remember con'ribulions to the Thrift
Shop are tax deductible.
The Douglas Gardens family residents,
Board and staff thank you.
AARON KRAVITZ
JHA Vice President
Chairman
Thrift Sho Committee
JEWISH HOME FOR THE A^EO

Friday. January 29. 1971
+Jl$fimrfaK3ir7
U-M Dean Named
For Abess Award
Page 3-A
Pr. M. RSBert Allen, Dean of.
Continuing Education and I'm-
fcesor Education at the I'ni-
\oisitv Tif Miami, will !* the re-
cipient of the 1971 Leonard L.
Ahc;s Human Relations Award,
William M. Alp.'i-. chairman ol
tin- Florida Regional Board of the
Antl-Defam it ion League of B'nai
IVrith lias announced.
Ths Award is given annually to
publicly recognize the efforts made
by an inrtivirhnl for furthering the
goal of better human relations and
contributing substantially to the!
uvll being of the citizens of the,
state of Florida.
The presentation of the award
will be made at a luncheon in the
Dupoirl Plaza Hotel Sunday. Feb.
:>*, which will he highlighted by
the annual meeting of the Florida
al Board of the Ant -1 > fa
mation Leag I
B iii-l. in, .'hauman ol
the Awa I Committee, declared
"In naming Dr. Allen, we an
recognizing the significant con-
tributions he has made toward
improving intergrourj relations ii
our area. His interest in improv-
ing the quality of life in our ur-
ban areas has been manifested Ir
exemplary leadership on task
forces and committees in the fields
of human rotations, education and
employment."
Dr. Allen is currently serving
as interim chairman of a special
bi-raeial committee recently ap-
pointed by the Southern District
Court to review Dade County
Schools' desegregation plans.
The Abess Award carries with
it a SI.000 research grant In the
field of human relations in honor
of the recipient, contributed by
Miami philanthropist Leonard L.
Abess.
MADA'N KOSHER FOODS u
IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE ITS
GLATT KOSHER CATERING DIVISION
Patrician Caterers
WILL CATER
THE FOURTH ANNUAL BANQUET OF
OHOLEI TORAH DAY SCHOOL
DuPONT PLAZA HOTEL
SUNDAY, JANUARY 31st
UNDER THE PERSONAL SUPERVISION OF MR SAMUEL WEISS
PATRICIAN CATERERS OFFERS THE FINEST IN GLATT
KOSHER FOODS PREPARED UNDER STRICT RABBINICAL SUPERVISION.
FOR YOUR NEXT SIMCHA CONTACT PATRICIAN CATERERS
9 5-
CATERING AT LEADING HOTELS & SYNAGOGUES
888-1912
WILLIAM KRtUU*
Kreuter Chairman
Of Ycung Israel's
Bar Mttzvah Event
il :;.
Ireater M
;i \
ntaii

dent. In i tv in ;ed.
i North Mi mi
i' 'h b itive and
munal leader, h is en na
chairman of the event, which will
m irk tM "Bar Mit/vah" anr.
s.uy of th<> North Miami Beach
congregation. Mrs. Finest Field
and Mrs. Theodore Goldsmith are
serving as cochairmen of the
A former president of the Young
Israel Men's Club. Mr. Kreuter.
who h is been active with the Jew-
ish War Veterans, is a past Deputy
Grand Chancellor of the Knights
of Pythias and a 32nd degree Mas-
on. He has also been an active
leader of the Boy Scouts of
America.
R ibbi Naftali Porush is the spir-
itual leader of Young Israel, which
maintains a full program of daily.
Sabbath and holiday religious
services and youth activities and
sponsors a full afternoon and Sun-
day religious school.
window $ 175
1
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MORTGAGE MONEY
like so many other commodities
a matter of supply and demand
NOWAVAILABLE
because savers arc re-discovering
the assured return and insured safely
of high-interest savings accounts at the
TOWER OF THRIFT FOR ALL SOUTH FLORIDA
Second Oldest in the U.S.
Founded 1933
MITCMEU WOLFSON
(.hiiiman e( Ihc Bond
MIAMI BEACH
MILTON WEISS
' President
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
main office:
401 Lincoln Road Mall, Miami Beach Ph: 538 5511
south shore:
Washington Avenue. Miami Beach Ph: 538 5511
sunny isles:
393 Sunny Isles Blvd. Miami Ph: 9471415
KENDALL!
Village Mall Center, 8950 5.W. 9/th Avc. Ph: 274 295j
north shore:
301 71st Stieet. Miami Beach Ph: 536 5511
NORWOOD:
650 N.W. 183rd Street, Miami Ph: 621 3601

OFFICE and TLANT1:0 N.E. 6th Stri r Telephone. }73-460J
PO. Box 297?, Miami, Florida SJ101
FFD K. Siioc'ift
Editor and Publisher
Si 1 maM. Thompson
Assistant to Publisher
The Jewish Floridian Dce Not Guarantee The Kaihruth
Of The Merchandise Advertised In Its Columns.
Pub!i-/ir.i ever) Friday \nct 1927 1 '
Becond-i I ta*i Paid at Miami, PI*, at 120 N.E 8th St.. Miami, FU
The Jewish Floridian has absorbed the Jewish Unity and the Jewish Weekly.
Member of the Jew.s:- Teleqrapr.ic Agency. Seven Arts Feature Syndicate.
V/orldwide News Servi e. National Editorial Association. American Association
Of Eng'.ish-Jewish Newspapers, and the Florida Press Association.
S_ ESCRIPTICN RATES: (Locsl Area! OneYearJj.OO Three Yeai s i:2.00
Out cf "! own ^j. :n Request
I : '- -
] nuary 2d. 1971
Number 5
3 SHEVAT 5731
Significance !n What Wasn't Said
Optimistically, the publication of Israel and Egvp'.ian
positions a! the beginning of the latest pha=e of the peace
talks is significant in what they didn't say, in the opinion
of diplomats who read these documents with the sort of
practiced eye the public does not have. No mention was
made by the Egyptians, for instance, of the Feb. 5 cease-
fire expiration date, nor was the threatened call for an
immediate Security Council meeting.
There was a diplomatic implication in the Israeli
statement that not only Israel's future boundaries but also
the lines held by its armed forces were open for negotia-
tions no territorial claims, such as the Golan Heights,
Jorusalem. Sinai Gnd other key points, were made in the
document.
Although both sides publicly discounted what the
other saidthe basic differences seem to remainin the
world of international diplomacy the feeling was expressed
by U Thant as "cautious optimism." It is hoped that, for
one time at least on the Middle East guestion, the UN's
Secretary General is right.
Visits More Than Mere Campaigning
One would hardly expect a liberal Democrat and an
avowed candidate for President of the United States to
return from what i now a customary trip to Israel to speak
in anything but glowing terms of the Jewish state.
But Sen. Edmund Muskie's recent vi-it, and these yet
to be made by the impressive lineup of Democratic hope-
fuls, should net be seen as mere campaigning. In a verv
real sense, (aside from the practical politics involved) these
trips will deepen the American understanding of Israel's
problems and, conversely, should provide the Israeli leader-
ship with a better knowledge oi tiie attitudes of American
leaders and people.
Granted Sen. Muskie's record of Kendshio and sun-
port for Israel, his first-hand inspection of that rer^cn-kab'e
country is certain to strengthen his conviction*. Not only
the material evidence of a peop'e determined to create a
self-sufficient economy but the spiritual evidence of the
areat desire for peace impresses the most objective visitor.
The man from Maine has noted the concern of the peoole
that their children, despite the drawn-out war and crisis,
should not learn hatred, and this is one of th
motivations of life and education in that little Middle East-
ern state.
The American Senator verv properly c'.so visited
Cairo, Moscow and West Germanv, since peace in the
Middle East depends on the attitudes and desires of na-
tions ether than those directly involved in the Middle
East conflict.
Need's Still Greater Than Facilities
Another sian cf Greater Miami's coming of age is the
increafina number of sianificant anniversaries which are
being noted. The Jewish Home for the Aged (Douglas
Gardens) is now preoarina to observe its Silver Anniver-
sary, and it is one in which the entire community may
take pride.
From i!s modest beginning of 33 beds in 1946, the
"Home new provides a un:ai>e concept in community
livina for 222 senior citizens. Unfortunately, it has a wait-
ing list that i= even larger. The fact that the need is
areater than its present capacity to provide for all who
should be served does not take awav from the record
this Federation agency has established in its 25 years of
existence.
MATTER OF FACT
by JOSEPH
ALSOP
WASHINGTON Th il fotn-
i in wishfulness, the U.S.
State l' pa'' :" ::l- spouting
n Th word is
there ai
Hi. i the !
:
V. .! in :" w il!
.
, at har i
'
Th
-
|!t t [s-a< I, "' ;> s
: : lolda
<>\ THIS .. ision, P Mm-
. Israeli'
:, h L'.N.
I I | .-
i: I S
i
Comment
Rabbi Arthur I' 'i b g, who
deals with the problem on an
international scale, believes that
Jews of this generation are pre-
lis| 'i.i'il not io know what anti-
Semitism is ill about, in his
opinion, we comfort ourselves
by lying to on. selvi s
His recent lecture here pro-
vided many sobering thoughts
for those who were present.
While it was a scholarly presen-
tation, it was exciting both in
delivery and implication for Jews
concerned with what seems to
bo a rise in the phenomenon ol
anti-Semitism. Dr Hertzberg,
whose l*>ok. 'The French En-
tenment and the Jews." is
a definitive study of the issu ,
destroyed a good many myths
ibout the causes of anti-Semi-
tism.
ONE OF THESE is that the
roots of the evil are in Chris-
tianity when. ;is a mailer of
recor'.. this has ne> r been the
case except in medieval times
i- 'I ended with the dissipation
of religious influence in the lal i
l.S'h century.
Hitler, Dr. Hertzberg pointed
didn't kill the Jew s bee*us <
they killed Christ he couldn't
i tared I As a matter of
' Alfred Ro*enberg, the Nazi
theoretician, leclared that one
Jews were being
- that "they foisted the
Je>- Christ on us "
I UK RUSSIAN show '
.tv n >t Christian reasons for
< "'ion. and il is not
the Pope but Pndsurny and Sa-
'it who u>|f 1,, ,|, *tr IV the Jew.
From Rabbi Hertzberg's point of
view, ilv endeavor to overcome
t "-..-I > w Ith J : ; I
n e:. Th '''< ) ol Syi i
, i 'd PV 11:
son that the S\ ri
, rove cat)
i' \
- -i
both i

!
-
j. -.'
I
V( i !> :>' '
M
To
:
Ij
.. |. | | Is: ai I
...,.1. i

MRS. MEIR told li
in i id that Israel h i i to I
what kind ol i- ace might li
It >uld
whal to no in grd t to get p
F ii instance, one of Israel's i -
emi nts. perhaps Its biggi st
nt i to I ft with
d fensible fronl ii
Bui one kind ol i. i itler
be defen< I dnst the Eg>| -
i i.i' s lone I
withdrawal to th it
the Egyptians were, in fa -
alone; wherej*s q ill si it
kind of frontier would be net d-
.-I ior lie fens against the I
tians, with the "unlimited" S
viel ba king the> m
v. ith Russ in s >l Her and
t'v
s! s, as is now the c i
Continueo on Pa 12A
by EDWARD COHEN
nnti-S : itism by edui
Chi ist. ins aw ij fr >m I u i me-
dieval pan is the wrong ap-
proach. So Is the attempt to be
less Galltzlaner" through ic-
i 'Itmal'on: there are delusions
which don't fit the facts.
According to Dr Hertzberg,
we were sold the bill of goods
that il we made ourselves over
"thev"woyld likens better, Hav-
ing done ail th. s" things, h I e-
livecs, "thev" like us even less.
"We have learned to live like a
'goy' With other Jews." he said.
i ii .ri" the ri action to Jew Ish
i phi avoi i i" assimilate or accul-
turate:
"We became d icto1 s and had
to build Jewish hospitals to ac-
commodate. We became golfers
:ii I had to Ivuld our own C
try clubs, We were meek but
when Israel produced th
. v i wi re labelled ruthl ss."
FOB THIS scho'ir, hatn
.- se darizc I n il
: ii blem ind st nu-
! ited more bj intel'i ctuals I n
Ile tract d ih notorio'is
ian pogroms of 1KX2 to the
intelligi ntsia, cited the fact that
Germany's professors continued
to work foi Hitler, and held that
th Am i'.. !'. c die ;e quol sj --
Of I he '20'S and '30'i
rot lei Ml.
Marx labelled the Jew as the
mpitalist
i lldridge < 1 a sr \ lew s m '-
n \ .1 i-'n jn\ ention, he
pointed out. The French revolu-
tion finally gfeV* lews
rlhts hu* In ttv> f"- t dr*t
they were left oul alone with
'' tors and hanemi n." and I v.'ii
the e ii ceived their privileg)
I
Ik lore the Jew s.
ONLY thk complete dl
). nance of th" Jew and Juda-
ism will solve the problem, sp
parently. In contrast to Sartre's
belief that Jews are created bj
anti-Semitism, Rabbi Hertzberg
contends thai by their peculiar-
ity the Jew creates anti-Semi t-
Ism and has done SO since Abra-
ham made his great dlscovi I
Every vision of the future,
whether it has been Hellenisti
Christian, Voltairean, Marxist
Freudian, Communism or Na
Ism pre-supposes thai men tx
com. quite cinular. Hut the C l
tinned existenc ol the Jew c
into question the notion thai
there is only one u a_\ to li\ i
society.
THIS IS THE heart of D
Hertzberg's argument md it I
a persuasive one when present
. d by a scholar ol his cred
I Of their Juda
Jew- in different, and the) a
being o\. '
achievers for instance, la I
Into the lesire to survive He
fean foi grand! ae sol itions
like revolution, for he distrusts
them from his reading of his-
tory Moreover, the price might
! the disaopearance of Jew- is
Jews ,,nd this would Ik I
i"-- to our eh ilization.
If there is any hone in the
i it is that the
Cit< ol M in -mist I'-arn to live
m Ith one another; th it Wi
civiliz ition Is Itatsjalpg this
II it doesnl happen, tho
11 is doomed.
And the Jew? "He must know
how t.> live alwaya m the midst
of trouble."

-.-
I
Prkkw^Jcoiuory 29. 1971
U m, i*. t ftrridHw

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Your savings earn 5%, 5%%, 5%% and 6%year depending upon
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at substantial savings
Purchase some brand name merchandise
at special low club prices
Dine at local gourmet restaurants and
enjoy special member discounts
See local cultural, sports events and
attractions at reduced admission
Receive a complimentary subscription to
"The Compass," the Dade Federal Savers Club
quarterly, which details the many ways you can
benefit and save money through your club membership
Membership in the Dade Federal Savers Club is
open to all those who maintain at least S1,000 in
a DFS savings account or agree to save $25 a
month to bring their savings to $1.000. For com-
plete details, visit, 'phone or write any of our
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compounded daily, on your savings.
^
DADE FEDERAL SAVINGS (DFS
ami-, i rAM AqqnriATION OF MIAMI \.. .
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF MIAMI
Joseph M. Lipton, Chaim
^ERM.**
f.'.iin Office
Flakier St.
Allapattah Branch
1400 N.W. 36th St.
I r!-anch
North Miami Planch
12b00 N.W. 7th Ave.

,W. 8th St.
Kei inch
U.S. 1 at S.W. 104th St.

10808' ribbean Blvd.

Page 6-A
*JelUnerii
Friday. January 29, 1971
As. .
Max Lerner
Sees It
NEW YORK Ai first I thought thai the prize for us
he exactlj wn ins Ui: achieving their ends should be
awarded to in rls >! the Jewish Defense League, with
their bluster nee toward Soviet officials in the
United States. But iv 1 t th Ftus; > retali ited by
ubtly disguised i il .......\
1 d I M ist gi tiding j
I to tli So\ nment.
ir
. ol ovei ith sides e h using means that
it<< Hi'' l)u in i s into a vicious I. B it th
lullyin to the R -- ins, who don't have the
goads tli D
ons" a led nned bj
KGB ; ilioe.
IT I-. FOOLISH the Russians to say that
'In' U.S. i Light to know
that w Irate in Russia thej lo in
the Unil States
Indiana ts. students work rs, well
and hu I group-!. In I ict, i I
s close to b n way" foi
r ill.
The ttouble is the the Dofen.< : ; tics have gone
Bccful demonstrating, rhej tried to mess up the
cultural exchang rt len Russia and the United States, -
ing (as thej ixil iti lo end the policy of "building bridges over
Jewish bodies." Thoj harass and plague minor Soviet attaches,
. nd it they are not behind the bon bing nl the Soviet Cultural
(."enter installation, thej 'r fuse to c it.

e Russians wou they
D ic's bitten
Ne\er A I
in
1940s. The 1
be Jews
i>. bin I a wall, kept i |

WHAT MAKES THESE Jewish n it ill the mon
litter is the spectacle of the new anti-Semitism rising in the
radical New Left groups, white as well as black, and even
mong the self-hating Jewish membera of tlie New Left who
have lost all sense of history as they have lost all mom of
their ties with the historic Jewish community. Their bitterness
thus shan>ned, the militants strike out nt a concrete target,
harassing the fringe Russian officials in Now York and Wash-
Ilgton foolishly, stupidly n::cl intolerably.
I call it foolish, however well-meant, even idealistic, bo-
cause these extt me measures cannot bring the Russians to
ay because they hurt the Russian lews whom they are
eat to help If it is a question oi rous nion about
the plight of the Russian J ws, the Soviet lead rs did il them-
by the L ningi id t il, and world n action w is so h istile
' ''t thej had to b \ m'litai now
i i America i in only stiffen the hostilitj of the Soviet 1
nd arouse i itenl rial Ameri-
I iups.

THE kvik.kkim. Of P esidcnl Pompidou last year was
;i. These methods are ilways counterprodu live, however
much thej may fulfill the self-image of the teenagers whom
l ie Defense League marshals in its ranks, and give them the
- >nse of making history' In the end. this displ ij of militancy,
In order to "i>rv..ke a crisis in Soviet-American relations," be-
comes more a matter ol self-indulgence in histrionics and heroics
than of true effectiveness
No Americans can expect the Russian Jews and their
t lends and allies to be lent about the Soviet tre tment of
their fellow-. Serious protest meetings, like the recent one in
u io k and like the protest march to th S iviel Embassy In
London, n purpose in bearing witness to the captivity of a
eople Thi So let government, instead ol recalling ti Washing-
ir, would do well to listen to what serious people
not by bar is ment but i>> solemn

>f Alpha E|
to h linner it S
I Resta I. 68 W.
St.. i
: t-'I-
p t speak-
c icditor
of th rnity's offic m mth-
ly publication, who has also been
isoc itcd with the Embers Res-j
tauram for over 20 years, in charge .
ol arrangements.
Robert H. Finch, Counsellor to
1 President Nixon and < member ol
' his Cabinet, will be the princip il
; speaker at the 12th annual Bob
Hope dinner of the National Park-
inson Foundation to be held in;
Miami Beach on Sunday. Feb 21 |
it lias been annOll
! foundet i
tional chairm in ol the Miami-base I
Parkins in Foundation, said sta j
h is re *iv< d cot nati in th
Finch, cl is t a Ivls ir to the Pn s- j
idem ai I rormer S eretarj ol
He Ith Education I W i
tend th to
in in.- Font
Finch, ivho was Lieut
G ivern r of Calil
ine || Nixon \ l ninistr ition
i personal friend of Bob Hope,
honorary national chairman of
in Parkinson IVnindation, who
K,. ittended the Foundation's Sot)
per plate dinner t i raise funds
foi research into the cause and
cure ft r Parkinson's Disea ev-
j for the past u j ars.
-.; t of th pi ici eds 1 im this
: i ni r will g > town I
,-,..... : ur-st it j Bob Hone Parkit -
i; -.....h Insl I
>i. ivc an ind thi exist ng on -
stor> Nat ion P rkin ion i tut
L5C1 NW 9th Avc M n
whic'i will n Hop
. i 1982. I
It.....i-1
a i| : "- I i ':
I .
. ti,. world i 40 to 50
nts ilailv.
^
ON THE OCt'N AT 21 it ST. t.'l"l II I H
; KOSHER RESTAURANT
OPEN TO THE PUELtC
Complete Dinners
Csrved fiom 5 to 8 p.m. Strict Dietary Adherence (JT Closed Saturday;
Let an Expcit Catering Staff Arrange your Party
Engagements, Weddings Bar Mit/vahs
Deserve Our Special Handling
GROUPS INVITED
Call JOE REIS, Catering Director
Phone: 538-6631
Reserve for a
Wonderful Vacation
at the SEAGULL HOTEL
$16
lo i.tt IS It
INCLUDING KOSHfcHiWAtS
r
Most cleaners
act like they don't
need your business.
"tafere different.
We don't depend on the tourist s alone for
our business. We depend on you. People who live
here. So we do everything in our power to make
sure you get the best dry cleaning and laundering
available anywhere. That includes our Sanitone
dry cleaning system. Our extra special hand-
finishing service for your fine garments. And the
best service you can imagine.
We appreciate our customers. And that
makes us different.
1 he word for quality cleaning and laundry
1201 2t)th Street, Miami Beach, Fla
Open 7 a in to 7 p in '1.1 538 8104
Same days, rvice for cleaning thirl launderin flatwork
Hull dry In h> lOout b> 5. Never an extra i barge.
P S We love you.
I

Page 8-A
-Jmlsti norkSbn
Friday, January 23, 1971
T
Cyclotron Complex To Make Mount Sinai
Hospital Center Of Nuclear Research In South
>
At tinir who-', physi' tru
placing new emphasis on preven>
tive modi nd striving to re-
. the need for hospitalization,
ANNA HA.V0
LOUIS HAND
' ; :' s i V. i"l
M mnl Sinai H-.isp'tal ol
;. : r. it ion's
id 'liver c >m-
prehensi' ;'-. < i t > ;hv ..-
... cmi nunity s
The device i- :i ir.edleal ej hlnn,
or.;- th< fourth in the United
si .'"s. which will delivered to
^1 mnl Sii ai in early spring
Huuika largely to tho generosity
ot a Miami Beach couple a erea-
ttve caption writer has vailed "the
In 111i. u Hands."
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hand, who
Hve in South Florida six months
a year have made the cyclotron
their i-i ) the hospital and. in
turn, to the community. The re-
i rmladclphia curtain manu-
facturer and his wife, Anna, h ive
don ted $550,000 for the machine
i- | -,'.,. chamber being built to
1
The cyclotron complex, includ-
ing a com] lepartment on nu-
cli :ine, l< among the ma-
jor ad i.'.: ins, now under construc-
tion, which will expand Mount
Sinai into one of the Souths most
complete it dical centers. It will be
under the direction of Dr. Albert
Gilson, who cal's the cyclotron tho
"sti thoscope of the space age."
"The stethoscope once wa the
physician's main tool in detecting
th ills of his patent." says Dr.
Gilson. 'Then came laboratory
tests and X-rays. In the future we
will see more use of nuclear med-
icine, with the helo of the cvclo-
. rig swift and pain! -.-
mport
. ihvio s, cai I be
- d points out 111
.: ct eti soon en
.- .> b r m ved by
:edures w i 'as
........ might b' re-
lermitted to g

ve products
facture ; bv th cyc!ott on an
ninistered by inhalation h
" c ickt ill." Th
I to varioua pan
nt's )dy. from where
th y ..... I ition that provid *
"dot ;: tture of the human in-
! rior
"Radioactive iron travels to the
blood and bones, eaaes to the lings.
Iodine to th- glands." I>r. Gilson
explains. "We know what these
an as should 'ook like under mr-
nvl con-lit ions, so the picture
which result- i, t- us know whether
then i* an) irrrgu'arity such as a
tumor or blockage,
Oth pplic it Ions of the cyclo-
-i the mass sci nin ;
testing of patient* on an ambula-
tory basis, enabling Mount Sina;
to sen iter numl ers in less
reduction of the .
ol Si y of hospitalized patients.
permitting increased availability
of beds.
Broader opportunities far re-
si .ii h will be created, and stud es
of vital organs and the blood flow
through them should eventually
reveal much new information on
th c tuses and prevention of hea t
ikes, bone diseases and
ithei dlnv its
thes in M' unt Si-
. (>bj -ctii in making total
health c ire services available," Dr.
Gilson savs W th the arrival of
cycl itron. we will become one
of five institutions in the w >r'd
with these modern methods avail-
al! .
"We ilready have assembled the
'sonnel physicians and highly
capable scientists trained in radio-
chemistry, cyclotron technology,
nuclear physics and nuclear In-
strumentation to evoke efficicn-

cv and utilizi tion from this com-
plex and so) hisl cated equipment."
!;. continues.
Work Dg I "Hid the eye! 'Iron's
spring delivery date, construct! in
crews the joh daily just
west o: Mount Sinai's mam build-
ing. An import .'-.: fact."- in the
entire n ject is to locate the mi- performed
. ta the patienl n | Calll
site, ami walls, siv feet thick, will
b,- ol hich-ile-isily eoiui-'te an>l
lead, fared with structural tile.
p ssiole since c impoun Is U pro-
B caus of the eye!
i w .' e I !' :i b" I
lion of the building, I wl
will he ereel I i ound I
Its arrival
ichii lerk
furthe I
be c >; '. id
..... hall
in gecon Is
th Ir ra lioactivit}
There ore. i' i neeessarv to
hulld no? only a special chamber
to booae the cyclotron, hut an en-
tin- larilitv as well which,
fittingly, the Mount Sinai Itoard
oJ Trustee* has named in honor of
its benefactors.
The \rm.i and Loull Hand Cy-
clotron Complex will in- two
stories high. Piles supporting the
IHC 1>\ 200-foot buildiiiK were
driven GO to 90 feet lieneath the
|t w ill t ike s mi" 11 me to d
hug the machinery, but we shouM
be operative within }1 I*," |1
diet Dr. Gilson.
It's a dal to which I
nxiousl) looking i i
Th it's u hen we vt liz
full satis actl in ol ha> ii
.-. ike thus p issiWi lys M
Hand. will n l '
people actually have
b.nofit from tlv sre it -...
mi will perform."
Here is the architect's concept of the Anna
and Louis Hand Cyclotron Complex lor
Nuclear Medicine, under construction ct
Mount Sinai Hospital. The facility is one of
several additions projected in the
campaign to expand the hospital into one c
tlio South's most complete medical centi
Dr. William Smoak (right), associate director of nuclear
medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital, discusses the complex
life-saving functions of the medical cyclotron with Richard
Munson, the department's chief technologist. The model
they are examining is a scale mock-up of the machine,
fourth of its kind in the U.S., scheduled for delivery to
Mount Sinai in early spring.
If your child can say "emergency"
teach her to say it to the Operator.
Dialing Zero for help in an
emergency is so simple a child |
can do it. And so important,
every child should learn how.
Here are three hints to help
you teach your child how to
get help if she ever needs it:
First, don't hand her the
receiver. Let her pick it up
herself, the way she would
in a real emergency.
Second, while you hold
down the receiver button, teach her how to dial the
operator.
Third, tell her to speak directly into the mouthpiece,
clearly and slowly, giving her name, address, and phone
number. This part is most important so it might be a good
idea to phone a friend so they can listen to your child
repeat her message.
We feel it's important for your child to know how to get
help when she needs it. And we hope she never needs it.
Southern Bell
We're a lot more than just talk.

l .i,,-> ol the v.
. ..
. : Winti rC no will
i j an a ards b in-
Pel 17 oring Ami assador
Arthur J. Goldberg, The former
i it ti Su] ne Cburl jus-
,\ is the founder i>f thi Israel
li .i Foundation and general
an ol the Hista Irul
I d n Jub.1, a itioi
:.!- year.
' S Si n. Mike Gravel of Alaska
ieak at the opening session
HON. RCHAVlAM AM!R
rut conference headquarters, l
Lincoln Road Bldg.
Pr. I .eon Kronish. chairman ol
thi board of th,- Histadrut Foun-
dation, said the pn gram for this
year's conference is 'by far the
mosi meaningful in the 10-year
history ol the organizatl
Wills, Trusts, Income Topic
Breakfast Speakers' Topic
i. hi ;" Snt...... s sr*
/:>. late j
... (office
,1 Jeff, N wil
-r,- ik on W I"-
..,.'-..- T
. S inday,
Thi .'
: ; i .' .
>,.,,.. Fa-r is i >
ii ,i M ."! .1 S-e n r B -other-
hood i'ii si I The | ublic Is in-
i ited f< i a nomina I i
Free Stamp, Coin Show
A stamp and coin show U
the public will be h< !d S itui lay
from 10 a m. t > 10 p.m. by the
Internatii ilatclic L'ni in at
th. Polish National Allianre B
2144 NE '-' Ave. Dealers from
throughout Greater M ami ill
participaU according to Rob rl I
Fire Extension
C'on't from Pace I-A
rai li leaders are veering away
from (heir earlier willingness to
accept a mi'lfi-nalional force to
potiee borders airreed on as part
of ;u peace -i ttlenient. The posi-
tioning ot troops especially
those of the United States and
t'>e Soviet I nion on opposite
skies WOllld turn the area into a
powder keg with a potential nu-
clear charge, they believe.
e of Soviet SAM-2
high altitudi missiles in Syria
v as disclosed this week. Their
deployment in Syria, which is
not a party to the current cease-
fire anu has refused to accept
the Security Council resolutions
i nding tin Six-Dav War in 1967,
is -'in as a complicating factor.
Jordan made its views public
in a letter to Dr. Jarring which
was clrculateo as a U.N. docu-
ment. The Ii tter made clear that
Jordan considers the return of
Old Jerusalem a prerequisite to
peace, and also demanded Is-
rai I's withdrawal for all occu-
pied territory before peao nego-
tiations I gi
As a gesture of community which we realize may cause in-
cooperation, the Founders of I convenience to some, is a fine re-
Mount Sinai Hospital have post- Isponse to the urgency of the needs
poned their annual dinner-dance
to March 21. The previously an-
ncunced date was March 6; the
iffair will be held at the Diplomat
Hotel.
Founders chairman Edward
Shapiro said the change was made
i:i order to avoid conflict with the
primal., dates of the l!t~l Com-
bined Jewish Appeal-Israel Emer-
ji in y Fund campaign of the
Greater Miami Jewish Federation.
Fel 15, Reservations for all ft ne- Kraus, president of the spons.
til l in avail;:' le at th Histad- -roup.
"Many of our Founders ar ai -
live workers in, and contributors
i i, the Federation campaign," Mr.
Sh ipiro said. "Therefore, fell
a postponement would help avoid
any dilution of manpower or re-
sources during the campaign
[ period."
Milton Weiss, president ol" the
Fid ration, and Joseph H. Kanter,
chairman of the CJA-IKF cam-
[ paign, praised the action of the
Founders in adhering to the guid-
lines established by Federation's
Multiple Appeals Committee.
"Postponement of the affair.
in Israel, as well as an endor i
ment of the validity of the Multi-
ple Appeals Committee's position'
said Mr. WeiSS, who also is a
president ol Mount Sinai, "Thi
entire community should be grati -
fo I to the hospital for this I
display n! coo] ral ion."
Max < Me. itz, chaii man of b itl
the F< del ati
Moi nl S
r.oti d: "Whil '. n cognize
\ aiidity of ill campa ns
ed i '' nan ne< :
uphold the i lui nature
philanthropy, .'. b lieve that \
. i ism quires self discipl
and informi d lea ship il all
legitimate phi
arc to 11 erat 'ffi cl ivi ly and
thi greatest good.
"To assu ntii ig sui
cess of the Combined Jewish V|
peal-Israel Emei ncj Ft nd an
paign, Mou il Sinai Hospital ack-
nowledges the great importance of
the CJA-IKF and urges all ;'s
supporters to | ai tii ipate in this
effort."
Newsletter Published
3y Hillel Foundation
With i!- i:d of a special
bj the G ar Mi
..it B B'rith I!
i-
\! .,-'.- pi ... ''
- i Ci ihl s cinipits
... .......
l'tr-1 hv Pihl -
' : tor of H :'
', ...
i"a new le:ter is d
- : ssiie n t s
i i world 11
; >t eis and
i s ich
. s Israel, So\ let Je y,
ri lations il h Bl ck Americans
... 1 ,. i.. ,M|-S.
Ncrlh Dade's Flori'llan Arms and Colo Lai Court will hold
:heir annual s 1971 <
.,'.,. '.:. c. Emerge] i paign
Sundry. I I Ivlh H. Gticcr, pre^id-?!'' oi the Americar
Triends of the Hebrew University, will he the guest speaker
for the event. Membais of the Floridian Arms-Colonial
Court CJA-IEF Committee pictured above n left to light
Herbert I.evine. Eric Gutman, who served as chairman fo:
the past three years, Robert Rivkin and Scm Baker.
Terrace Towers' CJA-IEF
Campaign Breakfast Feb. 7
v ; das. one of Israel's lead-- Je
st direel irs ind found r if! Fund i '
:- .ci Art irs SI idi i, will b i '
the B s- -:

for its great success and outstanding performance.
MAYOR JAY DERMfK
PKtSIDtNT

Page 10-A
+^le*iefi llnrictfo'n
Friday. January 29. 197]

l*V...... Ui-il.....' ........." ....... '
\TL KM SpcL
to. "i

Let is Walk Together
Rabbi Kirshblum
Bj RABBI DANIEL KIRHHBLUM
Temple Israel. Orlando
In the port if 1 nc un-
t- n c intinu
! twe n Ph iraoh an I
\ ,. m >-
th r .: I
ol his em-
Ph iraoh
tun s to Mo -
an shvs, "G i
and ors h i p
your G-d bul
- who n the i -
gtf ^^jH .
I jjjL .fl I "
| PJJ JE I wi-
ALL go. YOUNG
wi Ol
Mos -. th prophel lil e i1 ir of
our i ]'' reali i l
die Jiuiais
eked tim
le. was 1
ided oar-
with a
ruthl : "anl > ii i li id earll
il -
th N
Ph : s'stentlj t led t >|
MOS ;' \ -
i ... irth
would i !
th > w Mil I all be d ivi led In th
Nil To M ii ; Th
future tor you or your pi ople;
you are both doome I to obliti
lion from thi'* face of the earth."
Moses, who realised thai with-
out the youth there is no t i
row; there is no Sinai, no Deca-
logue, no Torah, no Eretz Ylsrael
no synagogue, no Judaism, no I
and no future, te)ls Pharaoh: v
are gravely mistaken. You declare
that we have no youth aril I say,
'Binareinu Uviskeineinu Nelech.'
Our youth is alive and vigorous
our tomorrow is vivid am) definite.
Freedom, growth and spiritual lib-
eration are the vehicles which will
lead us t i Sinai. We are la' i
the shackles of depression. VV i are
on the march of marches and
young and old shall go hand-in-
hand."
This indomitable faith
W
. .-".. nd com
..
our
nd
iph '.
VV in ir v as
th o
thi bat; /al and the
;. i ,'.,. ins ol itual
lag Pen idlt the cont i -
j '
. : iclaim daily 1
b i lyi
American Judaism. It needn't be
to! it mul rt be a!
Question
Box
B* R VBB1 SAMUEL J. FOX
: if m d lare, "With
our j I, v- sn '''
, bles l
th a
be!
Youth Center S-ttiiiir
For One-Day Retreat
The newly-bi It Y ith ("enter of
T le 1 i it M n '
,, ;] be i I'ir a one-d iv
: t ol he !' fo
I V
in Saturda; V't lugh '
; -. I
!'.''.....'
Vn lidatc?
. thi
vouth II mei : for v i
brunch disoussi in gro n i
,nd w 111 : come Int ol' ri i" '
- n nar.....n nun I i
low in t a fi m preeenl I
. | i ,. ith ,!' :
and df>*cin" in a tra lit i
Sabbath Botl
CANOLELIGHTING TIME
3 SHEVAT 5:48
V i' is ;: :::;! when lighting the
i m lies on a festival -ii doe*
t fall on th.....i, thebl
Lug b recited firs! and then the
e.iii.il, are ...
io pros be this
that
this is i '

i the Sabbath
ply to the sil tion on|
lh, i s There, one c innot
iu :h c indlei c innol be
i a I tival since, ind< cd, they
ir thi ie-' val. Also,
ace pting the rules of the festival,
ii d i live the c indies.
. the benediction over the
u would i ol prohil 11 the
woman fi itinf the cand i -
A IS.
p are some, however, who
I s ;. thai once the custom h is
ted ol light : the c in-
thi '' Ii tlon on the
Sabl nd shiel I I le eyi s
. the bero th<
edurc should be used
m t festivals lest the avi
eonl '
. I' Sabl
'. hut is the derivation ol the
\\.ii .1 !, | uie I mails
e ; v in the Ni ge\ h etion >i
Israel.'
Th Bib1 !'s us (Get -
7- tl i thai in :itj w is so c lied be-
the place ivhe i A
: \ : el ch m ide an oath.
.' fore, means "the
well of the oath."
The Aramaic translation con-i
siders the term Beer Sheba sym-1
: the seven lambs which j
u I in making the treaty.
In this sense the name would
mean 'The Well of the Seven
I. imhs "
A IhirJ explanation is offerer!
by the Aggadic literature which
claims that the name refers to
the seven wells that were there at
the time nf the Patriarchs. Th"
name would, therefore, mean "Sev-
en Wells."
This city, which w is abandoned
centuries, now is the virtual
if til" \'e vv
SYNOPSIS OF THE WEEKLY TORAH PORTION
'Bo'
An I the I io in unto I i I
LO-13. I6i
C NTTNUE : remaj
n a d "hard ul heart." There followed, tl.....m
. locusts, Iraknees Uwou
out nd tinally the t< nth pi igue wh -n W I
rn i ypt, men i l ca l I ind I
peoi tterly over their d<
the> then hastily sent 1 i time 1
ieir dough, took il with thi m in theii km i
THE PASSOVER God told Moses lhal heni the j i
would begin with the month ol their di livcrance In I iture, U i
festival was to be observed annually as < permanenl memor
of their delivei n i ed bread only was to b. eaten for
i n days, the first and w w nth d > be n oba
holy assembly when no work could be don.' M ismi
these commands to the Israelites through the nd in
thei rent iln In their nous -s until mon i n
the bl id on then- linl 'Is and do irposts God would s|
them from the pun in I I ed i ut to the Egyptj tb
Phe thi i ich il offer n | was to bi
aan after the i ; ind its s gn ticai
i ntion.
THE ISRAELITF SI \ t tb.
r ,th on I I5tn d u fb '
to the Pai......r i:
,,,, i to hi eaten only h>
sons Th : s( born a ai
to God cd. and be fus-
.-.'.. I. Th i A I
explained to ful general ins gi "tit lo < -
tbom of the Isr i< 11 F llw rm uroj
.... :.. of the Exodus, were to b lastinglj preserved "tor a
sign upon thine hand, and for a memorial between thin,- eyes,'
Dr. Robert Gordis To Speak Sunday
Dr. Robert Gordis nationally I teaches Bible at the Untnnl
cal Seminary.
He frequently lectures on r
temporary n u tin status
problems of religion and on '
ish life and culture. Be is a i
Bultanl to the Center for the S
of Democratic Institutions.
Th-' bibliography of Dr. G*>r
writinrs includes 12 books in
Mondav. Ita : (rinlis is ProfeSBOr ,, u ,,
field ol Biblical scholarship. Ii
of Bible at the Jewish Theological /.., ,, frequent contributor
> nnrv of America He nisi various journals and magactrx
knpwn rabbi will speak Sunday
on "God Alter the Holocaust
and Hiroshima" at the Grcnfie! I
Adult Institute series of Temple
Israel of Greater Miami.
This v. ir's scholar-lecturer for
the congregation's annual Gunman
Institute for th.' Clergy, to be held
'
i
-

Friday. January 29, 1971
Jmlsti nuridfon
Pag* 11-A
5-3
Gordis, Mandelbaum, Arzt
Breakfast Forum Speakers
The popular Sunday morning
Breakfast Forum Scries of Temple
I i anu-El, now entering Its eighth
j will bring three of the na-
tion's foremast thinkers t.> the
community as guest lectun rs
men who are prominent in the
i s ,,i e lue ition, religion
Soc I action. E iCh man will make
;i pr< si ii' il "" on the genet 'l
I : .!n i .i and the Mod :i
tries
Dr. II iberl Gordis, Semin iry
I to at t!if .; ii
Thi iktgical S minary, v. I] the
fii -t an- i1- t Sunday mori In :.
l- ll.l >r, t < irdis, >\ ho
iui i so f 1 ion
ade, Iso been vis ting
p -.....Id T .t
I i i ...... i i, >n j i
America, Dr. Arzt is also author
of Talmudic n s ai s i which ap-
peared in the Jubilee Volumes
''ish -i in honor of Professor
Alexander Marx and Professor
...oi... ,ii M, ivapl ir.
The lectures will be held in t'tc
Friedland Ballroom of Temple
Emanu-EI at 11 a.m. following the
I breakfasts, served at 10:15 a.m.
I Leorwd Zilbcrt is chairman of the
Breakfast Forum Committee.
Prof. Sandier To Speak
Prof. Robert Sandier, a member
of the English i > ipai t nent at tni
University of Miami since 1956.
whose chief areas of interest are
American Literature and Contem-
porary American Culture, will
speak on "Thej Don't Make Kids
the Way Thev Used To" Tuesday
Feb. 2, at 10 a.m. at the Forte*
Forum in the Auditorium, 1200
West Ave., Miami Beach. The pub*
If you're rich
and beautiful,
why aren't we
having an affair?

HANS H.
MARCUSE /V-.'\
i.Kutw* : V^y
l iKlor ". *
CATERING ""'.""*/.
Food & eerrfle/""X \\ I
louis wintw %.?;..: )//
tint tf'iittri ""~\,.:"i.-'**v
531-6061 /&r
-icrs
f' -.-s:sr At 2$ t. 74 5TS MIAMI ICA0I
DR. ROBERT GORDIS
New Yo past | esi lent of
icil ol Amer-
ca, i I hod) r>n '.iIng
: i\. ii v
! Asscmbl) ol
'. ii ica b itional as ici ition
; Cons itive r. bbinatc.
Dr. Bernard Mandelbaum, pres-
idenl d the Jewish Theological
Seminary of America, will pre-,mi
the lecture Feb. 21. Dr. Mandel-
baum, who served as Provost of
th Si minary ind as Professor of
Homi'etlcs on the faculty of the
Rabbinical Department, is the au-
i thor of iv my works. Including
"As iignment In Israel" and "The
I Alibi." His latest book,
C\ oosi Lil published in 1968,
High Hoi I >ay Mi s-
from i >*ide iriet) ol men
i.r : om the ; i
nt G i '
f the | i nt day. Ii'
has ^ I
Judaism
DR. MAX ARZT
for many publieat his re
cent pamphlet, "The Matui
he Conservath e M t\ nent," -
tublish .1 by i'i Burning i I'
Press.
Fine : will Iv Dr. M \
\r/i. who has b ''ii \ i 'e chancellor
of the Jewish Theological Semi-
nar.-, ol Ame ica since 1951 and als i
serves as Israel Goldstein Profes-
sor of Practical Theology on the
faculty of the Rabbinical School
if the Semin iry. A member of
the Translation Committee which
ii ing i< co npli t.-'.y r 'vis d
i tr inslat on of the Holy
Scriptures urder th.- auspii s of
.-.ish Publication S i :iety of
It could he the perfect affair. And it should be Af'pr all. we're
talking about the most important moments in your life. Your
daughter's wedding. Your son's confirmation. The one big party
of the season.
At times like these, you deserve the Eden Roc. The figures
may come to a little more, but would you really settle for any-
thing less?
Our catering director. Charlotte Horn, is without peer on
The Beach. Please don't hesitate to call her for advice, for spe-
cialized attention, and for a chance to look over the magnificent
new Cotillion Room.
Eden Roc
Hotel. Yacht and Cabana Club.
Ocean from 45th to 47th Street On the new Miami Beach
Charlotte Horn, JE 2-2561.
f./itf-i
Join the WINN Team
Stave Winn
Sales Manager
Slenn Huberman
Citerinj Mgr.
Sherman Win*. Vie* President and Beneral Manager
InviUi you ta Join ths Winn team and make the Balmoral
yeur hotel. Complete hotel and catering facilities are at
your dispoul-every occasion becomes a memorable one.
Bal Harbour
ON 6-7792 Miami Beach
\bur little girl
is getting married.
At last.
Will it be a small wedding and a big reception, or vice WM.
After all. there are a lot of relieved girl friends and rejected boy
friends that have to be accommodated, one way or another.
Either way. there are no two ways about who should handle
the affair. Who else but the Oeauville? For the affair of the
season...be it wedding, reception, confirmation banquet m et-
ing o. gala no one can touch the Oeauville for elegance of
service and cuisine, and the down.ight luxury of thei surrou ding.
And we never let down our standards. Whether ou in te
25 or 3500 guests Can your little gi.l have been that popular.
trta*
*G#dk
w
The world-famous Starlight Roof, or the elegant Mediter-
ranean Room at Doral On-the-Ocean ... The breathtaking
Grand Ballroom, or the exquisite Conquistador Room at
fabulous Doral Country Club ... These and other beautiful
settings can be yours for weddings, banquets, receptions
and confirmations, complemented by gourmet cuisine and
flawless service... in the Doral tradition.
IXm0N-TrE-0GEAN
Telephone Mr. Carlos Fernandez at 532-3600
DORfUaXMIQf CUB
Telephone Mr. David Kovac at 886-3600
]
Deauville
Call Al Sicherer/Executive Food Director/ 865 8511
Ocean at 67th Street On the new Miami Beach

-,....
Page 12-A
-JeHlstrhrMtor
Friday. January S9.'j7*!
< ... i--i =
Kasser Cochairman Of
Histadrut Conference
Norman J. Kasser. Coral Gables tut ion-: in Israel.
b tsiness and civic leader, has Lx< n
i rti.: cochairman of the sixth an-
NORMAN KASSIR
t il international Mid-Winter
, rence of the Israel Histadrut
( tundation. His appointment was
minced by William H. Sylk ot
. ideiphia, national president of
organization which supports
istadrut's health, education, wel-
cultural and religious insti-
*4L
sop
Continued From Page 4-A
IN SFM, with Mrs. Meir's
11 inciples of settlement, isr .
... llfully put the ball into the
side s c mrt, Thi even
i i-. d considerable temp
ir a\ among the So\ iets and
. .. ptians One sign of this, a
was the press con-
that was first loudly
I :,-! thei hastily can-
I b> the Egyptian U.N.
i egate, Mohammed El Zayat.
But now the ball is in play
. So perhaps one
e fact that the talks
i i ached the stage of an
ing round. On the other
i l and here is where the
v ishfulness comes in it i-
to forget that the
i.~ and Egyptians Ion
mnced their own principles
..? settlement.
two SUCH p-inciples were
ned, with brutal clarity,
the joint communique that
(iaraal Abdel Nass
i-i to Moscow last summer.
Principal One was total Is-
li withdrawal from all occu-
I I territory.
Principle Two was fre> re-
ission to Israel of all Pal-
ttinian refugees wishing to re-
i n.
this is nothing more nor
- of course, than a ri'r-ipo for
I's extinction. To b*gin with,
i frontiers of 1967 ate no
really defensible in 1971,
aus of the enormous Sox i t
deliv li. ; t" ttx Ir Arab
. ients. And above all. the re-
turn 1 i Israel of a million or
Palestinian refuj.....s. fl-
e and spurred on. of c wrse,
i > tv Soviets an i I".%ptians,
i' i itically swamp Is-
ite.
FET EVEN when he ]< '
!! i i appt .' (
new ;-! ~- -t. Vnw ir
. I Sadat, lia- not i I'v d
. -! from the principles of the
ow communique. B >th
- were also idlv r
I, only a few days ago bv
" ned Husseinin Helical.
i.-.rlv .IS vnt, to
oi imistie. Tided,
m will almost surely r in-
to t>e btossLv nremati"v
1 il, and unie--s. this c tnt "v
tho needed st I i fo'-e
to rec dcidatr
'' files' in the 'Middle East.
Mr. Kasser is cochairman for the
I [istadi ut Foundation for the
Southeastern United States, and
served as associat chairman of
last year's Mid-Winter Conference.
Mori is Lai gi of Clew land
president ol the Histadrut Council
in the Ohio city, will act as co-
. haii -i a- with Mi. Kasser. Mi
i is a founder ol the Histad-
rut Fot m ation and a life-long
leader of the Labor Zionist Move-
mem.
Kasser ts chairman of the
1971 Coml im I Ji \\ ish Appi nl Is-
rai I Emet
for Ti mpl i ilea A \ io pr
of the YM-YWHA cf G itei
lii man of the Jew-
ish O mmunit; Boai d for th
i tian B'r.a
Hillcl Fotuidal
I., ng acti\' in I ;i ai I Bonds and
the i 'tit- d Jcv ish A opt a I in
:.-. Kasst r have
assuin, d community li i I
i ol in n im i ous t rgani; ations
giro mo\ ing here.
He is a member ol the board of
governors of th< Greater Miami
Jewish Federation, chairman of
the Greater .Miami Committee on
Jewish Youth and a representative
of the Nati mal Jewish Welfare
Board t i the American Athl tie
Union.
Mr. K is a nvmb *r of tV
hoard .! trustees ol Temple Judea
and was eh.u man of the Macca-
biah Games Fieci pi ion Committee
for thi United St ites Committee
fi t Sports in Israel.
During Woi !' War If. Mr. K is-
si r was a fighti r pilot for the
Uniti d Stt Ai Fon and later
b. can' ESS -e atl d With the Pali >- '
line Irgun Movi nt, He i artici-
pated it; the acquisition and deliv-
er;, ol plam to the Higa lah foi
usi in the li : r- of Israel dui.
the 1948-49 war.
M Kass t i I I
, okiei b ter, Loi.. wen recent
' ol I- ii former pn miei.
David Bei I; it ion, at his rcsiden i
in Sde Boker,
.
S Courses Offered
Bv Beth Sholom
w
Five courses arc offered in Tern-
>'e Beth Sholom's Wednesday
night ad tit program. The nine-
week semester began this we '<
Dr. Salomon Llchter and Mrs
David Miller are cochalrmen of
he Byna cogue's gnonso ing educa-
: m iard Faculty members in-
: le '. Isa e- M. Fein. Ral
H irry J lt, M mry L Schwartz,
Vos Yan'eh and Barak Yar in.
Th, ir subjects include, "The Fu-
..... / the Pas.....The Living IV-
' "A Faith to Live By." "1 '
Explore '-"' lei"
. ,| ;...
R : bi I e m Kronish w 111 1 "i '
...]' | m 9: IS on- il
'M p thi i kly s?
- R il -
I non-tet
CJA-IEF Leaders Guests On
'Still Small Voice' Sunday
lers of the 1971 <
lavish At Emet W
Fund will : on "Th" S
< iiIV e" at 10 i. m VVCK i'
Ch. 7.
G tests v ill : clud J isej h K ir
c nn il : ch th man; Rabbi
rman, ass id ite ch tir
in: Mrs. Bu I in Levev, pi id i
i' thi Gn M Jev ish Fed-
ratio Wi ii n's Divisi m and
Myron Brodie, associate executive
11 Fe li iti
KOSHER CATERERS
Under Rabbinical Supervision
BAR VaTZVAHS
WFriD'NG PABT'C?
SPECIALIZING IN HOM CATERING
AND HOTEL WORK
888-3469 and
888-3460
If No Answer Dial Riifi-fi'Ije
400 SWALLOW DRIVE,
MIAMI SPKIXOS
IF YOU THINK YOU'VE HAD GOOD
CHINESE FOOD BEFORE.. .TRY
CHRISTINE LEE'S GASLIGHT
WE ALSO SERVE THE FINEST STEAKS IN MIAMI
located in the Golden Strand Hotel
179th Street and Collins Avenue
Reservations Call 945-9075
Suggested 947-5661
ROVfiLPflLm^
154S Collins AVI. Miami Beach
Diiiig Room Odor to the Public
pnon* *
531-7381 Phone 531-7381 For Reservations
MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS
NOW FOR PASSOVER
-i l K -
JEWISH-AMERICAN CUISINE
THAT MADE THE FAMOUS
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YrturUcsts
The Lerierj
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9
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The Studio Restaurant
LUXURIOUS DINING
ELEGANT FRENCH CUISINE
For Something New and Different in Our Miami Area
2340 S.W. 32nd Ave. 443-2536
Col Fcr Information Be'orp Going To The Theatre
Serving Authentic Italian Cuisine
^fid^
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Restaurant
Dinners from $1.55
Wines-Bee rs-Cocktjils
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THE-; Best Italian Food j
at
4 Xich and Antoinette's
-ji Restaurant
X 1624 N'.E. 1st Court, Miami ~J
Y 374-2080
r

Pcge 14-A
+Jm-ist FlericfiD/n
Friday, January 29, 1971
Israel Newsletter
By CARL ALPERT
Whose Call Should Yeshiva Bachurim Hear?
pi'Ri.ic DISCUSSION has been resumed on the
"delicate question: Should students in Talmudic
Yeshivas continue to be exempt from military
The present system, put
into effect when the State was
established, was the result of an
agreement between Premier Ben-
Gurion and Chief Rabbi Herzog.
From time to time that arrange-
ment has l>een challenged in the
Knesset, and recently members of
the Mapam demanded a formal
government review of the policy.
Last summer a reserve lieutenant filed suit in
the High Court or Justice calling on the Minister of
Defense and the head of the enlistment office to
show why they should not proceed at once with
full call-up of yeshiva students. He pleaded that
by their failure to serve, an additional burden was
unfairly placed on him and other reservists. In that
particular ease, the court found that the lieutenant
did not show that he was personally involved. He
could not come to court in a matter of abstract
justice. This was a political controversy, and the
thereby save many li\"s. Let them
as civil defense guards, or do other tasks which
courts refuted to be dragged in.
Tin- two points of view can be summarized as
follows: The religious leaders plead that with the
destruction of the meat centres of religious schol-
arship in Eastern Europe everything possible must
be done to renew the wcllsprings of Jewish learn-
ing. Students who adopt study of the Torah as
their way of life and on a full-time basis should be
enabled to devote themselves to such study undis-
turbed. None of them are exempt. They are only
granted deferment, and when they discontinue
studies, usually around the age of 28 or so, they go
into the service and are subject to constant call
for reserve duty thereafter till the age of 54, like
everyone else.
The secularists charge that thousands of young
men take advantage of their religion, are slackers.
They are willing to let others die for them, while
they burrow in their yeshivas. If all of them went
into the army they could provide additional fire-
power which would, at least, cover the brave com-
mandos who attack enemy positions, and would
would nol Interfere with their stud) oi Torah, t1
say.
it is ii to n ite In it a grov ng num-
ier of yeshiva* do not a\ ill themselves of the
danket exemption, and have made arrangements
for their boys to serve like other youth. Members
)f the Orthodox religious kibbutzim all serve, many
ii them as parachutists, or in other active comb it
units, and call on their brethren in the yeshiva- to
do likewise, and thus bring honor to religious
Jewry, as well as improve the public image of the
Orthodox. The Rambam is quoted as declaring th it
Jews must bear arms in defense of their brethren.
"Even great scholars must serve, and even on the
Sabbath if it is a matter of saving life." he wrote.
The heroic record of the religious youth with
the yarmelkei and the long lideloCks In the Six-
Day War gave many people a new respect for the
Orthodox, but the conflict remains between two
extremes: the secularists are opposed to any privi-
leges whatever for the religious, and the rabbis
maintain that constant study of the Torah strength-
ens Israel's spiritual position, which is no less im-
portant than physical strength.
th
M
A|
?PI
-V
ll>
BOOK REVIEW By Seymour B. liebman
Efraim's Book By Alfred Andcrsch
A nnoi'
translated from the German by Ralph .Mann-
heim fTVwthleday & Co., $6.95i won the Nelly Subs
Prize, this reviewer is neitht r im-
pressed by the book nor by the
translation.
The blurbs on the jacket of a
book are usually for the unwary
and naive, and represent the puff-
ing of a salesman. The blurb on
the Jacket of "Efraim's Hook" con-
tains a truth. It states. "The story
termingle, as In m mory, is in desire." This de-
< quiti < ly the style of the book, We
when ii the book as "ab ml
ind Jev t yesl lilt and 1
Jt G my. The
As Vie Were Saying; By ROBERT E. SEGAL
Has Moscow
Bought Time?
JOBEL PRIZE winner Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, author
of "The First Circle," has exposed ev ry fibre ol the
cruelty of the New Order structured by Stalin. Brilliant
Russian scientists and other academic-
ians are placing their lives in j. opardy
by speaking up against the new "trea-
son" trials. And by their dramatic de-
cision to modify the death sentences of
Edward KuznetSOV and Mark Dymshits.
Russian jurists may Ik telling the world
they now comprehend Stalin's own ob-
servation: "A single death is a tragedy;
a million deaths are a statistic."
The distant American observer should temper his rejoic-
ing ovei such display of Russian mercy by looking more
carefully at the nature of the commutations. In his 15-
year confinement. Edward Kuznetsov will have little to
eat. Those familiar with Russian prisons say that a maxi-
mum of 900 calories a day will be provided Kuznetsov.
Slow starvation thus replaces the firing squad's bullet.
One imagines that Comrade Lenoid I. Brezhnev's
impulse to get on radio and television to wish the Rus-
sian people a Happy New Year as 1970 bowed out was
a decision inspired by the winds of opinion blowing into
Moscow in connection with the trials for those suspt ;ti d
of thinking about hijackin ne to freedom. In that
unique address, the leader of the Russian Communist
Party asserted that the international position of the
Soviet Union was i never before and the U.S.S.R's
world prestige high. Is he correct?
How can he l>e when men and women throughout
the world are sickened by the hasty trials growing out of
Russian accusations against nearly two score people pos-
sessing the courage to say they wish to leave the land
in which they grew up?
Free men must continue to expose the disdain Russia
is showing for due process. More than that, free men
must join in a demand upon governments everywhere
to strengthen the machinery guaranteeing the right to
emigrate and start new life in a new land.
publisher or book designer apparently did not n
the jacket copy: on the spine of the book under the
title, there appears: "A novel about a man's search
for a young girl, for truth, and for himself."
Th.- book is supiwsed to Ik- the autobiography,
written in novel form, of a journalist born in Ger-
many and sent to England by his Jew ish parents as
a child in 1935. When the author writes, "Lord,
what digressions I've indulged in.i" we can only
say "Amen!" When the fictitious editor in the book
to whom Efraim submitted his manuscript wrote
in the margin. "Come to the point" or "Unnecessary
loss ol pace," we recognize a discerning editor, it :<
i pity that Doubleday didn't have an equally per-
tor.
to lion, there were, of cou
i ..... tor.
Should he trans I thi he a
,i i nal, oi ite th
i
a choice
!.: authoi -
'
;thy
tences with foui or I ndent and unre-
' ts. Here tl if the pond
Faulknerian or Tom Wolfe style pained this
rev iewcr.
A careful copy editor might have suggested
the elimination ol the boring and continuous nam-
ing of streets, right turns and left turns, and the
distances to and from other unknown Streets in
Berlin. Rome and London. These impede a following
of the author's "stream of conscience" style.
It may never ho of great importance in Europe
to learn how clever the author is in opening a pack
of cigarettes; he merely removes a corner of the
top foil. This method is followed by every Ameri-
can who smokes, and it is boring to read a one-
page description of that process. The whole book
seems to deal with the total recall of trivia which
has no purpose i:i being recalled at all.
Panorama:
THE AMERICAN SCENE By: BEN GALLOB
Jobs For Elderlv
A FUSE employment agency for elderlj p >rsoiu
created by a Jewish women's group in San
Antonio. Tex., has made hundreds of pi icements
since it was started two years ago and is continu-
ing to bring applicants and J"l>s together despite
a recent decline in the number of job openings be-
eau-e of the current economic slump.
The Senior Employment Service was started
a: September, 1988 by th' s in Antonio section of
the National Council of Jewish Women after it
found t!-. re w is no such agency in San Antonio
for such job hunters. The current issue of tht
v) i Council W It probien
not
find j when t i i
| th v at
t to fill. '
i by a
NCJW : i
with one pai
Ided
y S
also pro' The NC'.I'A
lion pays the costs ol operations, Including tht
rj of thi ivorki printing, stationery anu
miscellaneous supplies, tot tiling about $2,501'
annually.
Available to any job iver 50. the sen-
ici is free to both applicants and employers. The
volunteers Interview applicants and then classify
them according to interests, ability antl past experi-
ence. In a typical month, the report said, the SES
interviewed 61 applicants, received 46 calls from
employers, made 53 referrals and accomplished 36
placements. ,
By DAVID SCHWARTZ
Is Tel Aviv Going To The Dogs?
ACCORDING to a story by
Martha Meisels in the Jeru-
salem P >-t. ti. re are now 4,000
dogs in Td Aviv registered with
the munidi tlity, and a beauty
; irl tr h is been i ipeni d In North
Tel Aviv Where they can get a
hair cut or shampoo.
Two young Israeli bachelor
girls, who love dogs, are the
owners of the business. The new-
Tel Aviv beauty parlor will not
only style the hair of dogs* but
sell d >'- supplies. Most people
mistakenly believe, we are told.
"that lef! over people's food is
good for dogs. Init this is erron-
eous. They are usually too fatty
and salty.' The shop will also
sell special dog candies as well
as clothes for canines.
There has been a great dog
explosion throughout the world.
of course. Instead of adding to
the human population, it seems
many people prefer to have a
dog. (For one thing, you don't
have tO send a (log to college
and the generation gap between
a dog and his owner is not so
great At least, tie dogs floirt
speak about it.i
Western Sews were the first
to bring dogs into Israel. Few
of the oriental Jews hid any,
but oriental Jews are now tak-
ing to them and have become,
it appears, the more passionate
dog lovers.
It looks like every* dag- wifl
have his day in Israel!

I ijewislli Flor idian
Israel's President Shazar
To Attend Conference
! Miami. Florida Friday, January 29, 1971
Section B
ADL Leaders Attend
Three-Day Conference
MB! A M (JTA) Some
,i, j attended the three-
r.nual meeting held by the
. < itive committee ol
j -. ti-Del imation League of
B i ith
.- ymour Graubard. ADL na-
.haitman. made public a
ilnary report on the recent
-.unity control" conflict In
Ni v* York h spitala, ani warned
the growing radical left
:,. nl t.u. at.-us New York
City hospitals with turmoil, dis-
ruption, Instability and lower
. i :, saionaJ standard*.
Because substantial numbers
i : Jews are in the medical pro-
fession, Mr. Graubard observed,
the appearance of anti-Semitism
distinct possibility, and the
victims of attempted extremist
i ,i..i talo < en will lx- targe*
I .. n 'i predominantly, Jewish.
The ADL itudy described one
(.( fit medical organizations, the
Hi alth I'oli. > Advisory Center,
as in "independent research and
ion org mization function-
as a u la ministry
h in public, especial-
ly i as victims of a profit-
mi al Industrial com-
I
at Ion i i lived
the Mi lie il
i Humai Rights,
\ t-lai > 10,000 n
immitt .I to
il losti .'. of h
i i politics
i. i i ivorker
Institutions."
,\ I | >u| I '. liciuns for
: -.. iibi 5 it-
m II .:.- to til
. it and
ch< r ind bioli i
\. ,, .- toi i (ample.
Student Health Organiza-
i i in l'.ni.'i. was
in ghetto munity
, iv rty-sti icken
ADL port noted,
i thai i Heal st idi nts
involved in it--- summi i
i jH?t to aid poverl /-strii ken
l in nine cities, but a
tn theli thinking has ap-
i .mi ntly iak n place and the
organization now leans toward
i otitical action within the health
in- jysti
. : F rst -r. tin- Al >L's
...! counsel, told the dele-
that i irther grants ol
Jai inesi ait route authority, II
I nel .al to the United States,
ukl be explored, but that ne-
iations are Inappropriate so
long as Japan Air Lines partici-

rail iii th Arab < con
cott ni Israel. H< sees the r.s.
agi I'm.'at iii negotiate th < ex-
pansion as an opportunity to Im-
plement the American govern-
ment's anti-boycott policy.
Mr. Forster pointed out that
Japan Air Lines has consistent-
ly refused to agree to a civil air
treaty or mutual landing rights
arrangements with Israel and
giving it additional routes would
be giving tacit support to the
Japanese boycott. Only pressure
and public opinion can force a
Change in Japans policy, he said.
U.S. Educator Will
Be Superintendent
Of Israeli Network
Rabbi Aaron Paperman, a lead-
er in the religious educational
so il- In .v-'-.'i i.-.i for the 1 ist 30
years, has been appointed to the
s on of Superintendent of the
network ol 245 Chinuch Atzmai
Torah schools in 115 c immunlt
-i I-- ii bj the Dir.......rate of
rorah schools for Isr ioI Chi-'.
.... ....,..-
-. it di
-,.. \ icric i". I nmitte '.
i: || rman is h I tied
. Lsit Miami nd l Jewish
thro hout the '.'
States to repoi
th ;1
i:.,i,i i in, who was a
... U.S. Army dui
i [1 I as thf ex
mitivi vice pi
Y. shh i in Ce lai ; >'' an l
-. r was |
the Talmud cal Acadi my of Balti-
u re. Md. He and his I
United States rcci ntly to
.... ... home in
i,., s he Hi" central of-
,: |h i mch Uzmai Tor ih
, ;,. : icated. Ral M .she
Fi : n is president ol Tor ih
si hi >
Rabbi Addresses Residents
Rabbi Joseph A Gorflnkel of
Temple B) th Moshe will address
residents of Century Towers and
their friends at 8 p.m. Sunday on
the subject of "How Much Po
You Really Know About What
Judaism Teaches?" An informal
Ask th Ral bi" dialogue will fol-
low the formal presentation; Wil-
! liam Kustln. cultural chairman of
the Towers, will preside._____
inhibits the anl i-canc >r anti-
b idles is detected early enough,
it should be possible i i find a
substance thai will stimulate
the anti-bodies, she said.
Dr Tal agreed with her col-
|i agues th it far more testing
is needed to confirm the Jeru-
salem finding*. One of the things
scientists want to know is wheth-
er the test would be reliable
for people in various countries
and not just for Israelis, since
the biology of cancer is different
in different populations and
whether the preliminary results
obtained by Dr. Tal will hold up
when extended to thousands of
seemingly healthy persons in
large populations tested by a
wide vai it ty of laboratories,
NEW YORK Israel's Presi-
dent Zalman Shazar Was a<
an invitation to come to Mian i
r, aeta for the official Inau
of the Israi l Bond < trganiz
ran:;' I tntl '' In-
' nfei ce, w hich w ill
be he Id March 1-6, Sam Ri
berg, general c
... need.
; Piimi !
.VI. n idi a hurrii d visit
the United States to attei
Israi IB 'i nizatio i
tional Leadership Mobilization
( onfen i ce, w her 35 i I
|i aders from the I Initi
and Canada planned the
paign to sell an unpn 11
J1 -' million In State ol Israel
Hi.nds this y. ar. Mr. Allon d< -
livered the major address.
Ira Guilden, president of the
Israel Bond Organization, pre-
sided at the session: speakers
also included Abraham Feln-
berg. chairman ol the board of
directors, and Leo Bernstein, ex-
ecutive vice president. Harold J.
Goldenberg of Minneapolis was
elected to serve as chairman of
thr new campaign planning and
steering committee.
Tribute will be paid to Dr.
Joseph J. Schwartz, who retired
Ii st Sepb mbei after 15 years as
.. Ice president an i chk I
,,.., i the Israel Bond
luring the U a
ural Conferenci hero which will
: the 1971 campa ft
Businessman 'Recreating'
300 Van Gogh Paintings
- \N !' ^XCIS ) I'-
Leo Scht i. a Jewisl
und tm'
project: 1
ill SCO paini f fan
1 >\r .- ", Vii nt vat
So i i der is c -.; ; '
Hons '-' pe pie In th -
irt w irld ly they ai sup
but he bts that he will be
to complet all SCO, He t K>k up
hw unusual hoi by tfter a h
atfack eight years ig >. Schnei
who has read everything he could
about the painter, works for Troy
if California, a men's wear manu-
'acturer But Five ni ;hts and e> -
ery w ekend he is in his st
In his home here working on an-
other van Gogh, His objed is not
pure van Gogh: he gets a little of
j himself into each painting too
The famous van Gogh "self-por-
trait" is noticeably more cheerful
in th? Schnei I -r tre tment of it.
ecirance
r
Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Smith, chairmen of Temple Beth
Shalom's second annual Combined Jewish AppeaUsrae*
Emergency Fund campaign dinner-dance. hosted he
v,cmen of Temple Beth Shalom's Committee of Has s tfa
luncheon meeting to coordinate plans and assign^respon
sibilitie. for the dinner to be held Saturday, Feb. 6 at the
Playboy Plaza Hotel. From left are Mrs. ] S-r. Mr.
Allan Wilson. Mrs. Irwin Teplis. Mrs. Irving Kaplan, who
Will be honored along with her husband at the dumer. Mrs.
Harry B. Smith and Mrs. Harold Zinn.
now in progress
Ml. 1 Ml WBM TL. SB
IT. LAI UEHDAI.E
ft ES T I'. ILM liE. t i ii
All stores open late Friday night. Wonderful
savings for yourself, your family, your home I
sorry no mail or phone orders.
CARRY YOI K BI-HDi.XK'S CBEB1T CAKBt

7 age 2-B
+Jewi
Friday, January 23. 1971
'Festival For Peace'
Scheduled Thursday
h i Dinil
Minuter G
u.11 appear ith Lew Nor-
JAN and UUIAN CART
I J nd 1 n Barl
\
. : I
. tivities '
: ]::,I : : :
I
in Mian B Ma -ch i
6. "iv inference murks the
i i he annual campaign tor
the ee world.
From 1966 to 1968, Mr. DiniU
Israel's Minister Plenipoten-
to R ne. He returned to i
!-n- Washington Embassy In
- :\ in s as information di-!
:. until being summoned home
to give Prime Minister Meir the
of his expertise on inter-'
lirs.
Mr. NiD m tn, noted humorist and
mteur, will serve as master of
ceremonies of the festival, expect-
i to draw an audience of more
than 3,000.
He li.is appeared in numerous
' r s, suppi clubs and hotels
the Unite states and C in id i
ind his one man peformances al
'.in nd T wn II ills in N<
louts.
i r th h [hts of the i
will be 1 Jan
Ml' ii B >utstand
who h
' than a
I :
... lyric 1
'
. ntv 1 y
I '
:' > C'ty Mu : Hall, I -
1 .: iirl i'i concerts
'.....h L*i States
Rurope, Vustrali i and Isi ai
United Synagogue Planning
3-Dav Education (Conference
\ thi
i with Dr, .' iv
U i>
I hei S in y thi i ;h T
.
ut mad<
.
of t h i
!
V
i
-

N '. m il
Conservative
tub
I widely and
i "
ni whi -ii
F the
Ij......i
mplishi
series will
at Ti nanu-El,
I B a. with I
i. edu rational dire :tor of the
man an t
in the ti
United
01
. | ,|
Di Stern w on 1
"Ge< It in thf
lewLsh His to
i i | ,
i. He

ling Dr. Stern will
t with School Board mem
t Tempi Ner Tamid t" discuss
'Priorities in the Synago
h k>1." The gathering will be
I I tinder the chairmanship if
tabbl Eugene Labovitz.
4

dr. jay mm
T -d ly morning, both rabbis
din irs will meet
I c St in at Temp M -
of the
tw days of conferenc s
and t i make pi; ns for the imple-
' in of those pr
ipon.
^!>$&>2a2&v
Wutletaic Distributors of
and

iMtrnirMi!!, R,MMM^
Processor] and Exporters
i the finest U.S. Gotrt. Impeded
KOSHER Ml ATS and POULTRY
2891 W. 4th AVENUE,
MALI AH, FLORIDA
Phone TU 7 269*
Dropsie President
Compiles 350-Page
Study Of Mishna
A comprehensive study of the
Mishn :. bas i Qn U\- Qjjrp
ts. h is been c impiled by
Dr. Abraham I. Katsh, president
>: Dropsie University. The 350-
volume \\ :s pro luced in He-
brew by Mossad Harav Kook, a
leading [sra ili publishing house.
The bonk w is dedicated to Zal-
The I-.ra.-h official once was a tal-
mudic student of Dr. Katsh s fath
er, who was chief rabbi of Petah
Tikva, Israel.
Dr. Katsh made five trips to the
Soviet Union, over a 13-year peri
od, to complete his Ginze Mlshnt
from the G*nlM collection In th
Leningrad library.
A microfilm collection of all of
his ori ;in il res -arch m iti ial is
; : i College and
to students ind ;' lars
throughi ut the Unit !.
-
of

Friday, January 29, 1971
*
'
+Jml$li ncrldHnun
Page 3JB
letters to the editor
uniTOH. TIip Ji-Misii FlorhUun:
The sad figure of Rabbi I
;i mps because thejr plotted to m-
:ap Conununisl suppression. The
nobl acts ol these Ji wa speak
ralUSbhun2 Rdbbl Lw-i excuses
!",,>,!t\T:-a. ?.,....lJ;nm .:; explanations. [| Ls
matter of Justice and l>t?li. f in hu-
man dignity,
MAURICE GOLDBJXG
Miami Beach
Chug Ivri Meeting Set
Chug Ivri, the Hebrew spi-akin*;
group of North Shore,
Bea :h, will meet Wednesday al
2 p.m. in the Blue Room of TVmpl
Mcnornh, Carlyle Avenue and 75t
Street, Miami Beach. Levi
ihok wiM leetur on thi pi i
Hebron, in the r neral curriculun
5-;
s to protest the outer} against
ins oppression of Russian Jews,
he did so in an open letter to the
news media. His statement was
supposed to assure concerned peo-
ple and governments that Jews In
the Soviet Union are well-off and
do not need outside help.
For this unique act ot treason,
the Rabhi is more to lie pitied than
condemned. One can understand
the pressures and dangers to which
h must he exposed as leader of a
h ited and maligned minority group
behind the Iron Curtain.
The use of this broken, scared <
old mart a< a tool In the hands of
his Communist masters is obvious.
I Is a tragic figure in the greater
ma i spiritu il leader who
h prostitute I himsell to his -
sters.
One need on!
vords Id man to the
| I thou
i to under;

i daily i isk th ir 1" s bj
i
he .' (ws vvh i ii" '
i -! ivi Ic ith ol 5o\ li I
noble who survive, bui only
noble can survive with honor.
the
The similarity between the N izi's
and tin- Communist's att mpts to
i .i ws as icapegoats, and their
use of puppets to camouflage their
attempts at genocide, is striking.
The notorious Goel>l>e!s. during the
Nazi holocaust, used the Red
Cross by Inviting them to concen-
tration camps which were specially
prepared for their visit. Even the
victims of these disguised extermi-
nation camps were forced to assist
with the deception and ultimately
their own destruction. So too, is
Rabbi Levin, and others in Mos-
cow, forced to participate In the
di sti uctl >n of their own pc iple
^ ftor the Nazi exp \ hu-
- \ I er will
iled bv the current S -
..... I. O Ol
I rul n Puss
t poo]
in it Ion o
. .
I
Miami Municipal Judge Harvey I. Reisman (right) is shown
being sworn in as Metropolitan Dade County's newest
Commissioner by Circuit Court Judge Francis X. Knuck.
AVOID THE RUSH
VISIT
SOMMERS INCOME TAX SERVICE
TODAY
YOUR TAX RETURN PREPARED
BY EXPERTS
Two Locations
14 N.W. First St.
Around The Corner From Internal Re-vanu* Offic*
9 A.M.-6 P.M.
20201 So. Dixie Hwy.
Next to Cutler Ridge Food Fair
9 A.M. 9 P.M. Mon. Sat.
12 Noon -5 P.M. Sunday
233-1341
ALL TYPES
OF FENCiNG
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
FARMING
A.B. FENCE CO.
TEL. 221-4183
7270 S.W. 42nd Terrace
EDITOR, The Jewish Florldlan:
i
The reply of Arnold I,. Feiner
to an article written by columnist
Edward Cohen in his column of
Jan. 15, is both illogical and factu- j
ally incorrect.
It seems that Mr. Feiner takes
issue with Mr. Cohen in his con-1
tention that some of our "talk
shows" are extremely anti-Semitic,
violently anti-democratic, and im-
bued with a strong tone of vigilant-
ism and fascism.
Mr. Feiner also takes exception
i to Mr. Cohen's suggestion that
i some sort of censorship should be
impost d on this virulent form of
one oi the manifestations of incipi-
ent fascism.
! If he to k this position, Mr. Co-
tot ally c >rn cl.
It is to t
il to simplj
speech, as well
is beii
in Iil n.
If I recall
il Su-
Courl .1 istic W
Holmes v
:
when
thi re if i i fire, that er
a court ited
and si nt to prison,
Mr. F,Miter's last I ;
his letter talks i b tut the Holo-
caust.
If, in the late twenties and i arlj
thirties. Germany, under the Wei-
mar democratic constitution, would
have taken steps to muzzle and
outlaw the growing Hitler move-
ment, not worrying about liberal
cliches, there would have been 1 --
likelihood of a Hitler period and
the i nsuin; Holoc tust.
HERMAN llllit.K I
N'orth Miami Beach
There Are 2 ..til V oting I'ouoli s
Who Are Packed send lt< ailv To
Move To Israel!
ill T TREY ri.VT t
They fan." says EZRAS TOllAll
wilh the hclo of G-d AMI VOI
The EZRAS TORAH HOUSING PROJECT
in Israel provides housing for the future leaders
of our people. How can we fail such a call?
Learn all about what is happening .
come fo an open meeting at the home of:
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Berkowitz
3480 Sheridan Avenue
Miami Beach .on
Wednesday evening, February 3
at 8:00 P.M.
RABBI DAVID LIFSCHITZ, one of the foremost
sages of our time, Rosh Yeshivah at
Yeshivath Rabbi Isaac Elchanan, will be
Our Honroded speaker
PLEASE COME!
Chairmen: Rabbi Alexander Gross,
Rabbi Dr. Tibor H. Stern, Rabbi Dr. Berel Wein
The
Calm Cruise
for Harried
Husbands
*
The trouble with most cruises is that everyone else, seems
to be in a frenzy, especially the ship's social director.
Party-party-party. Funny little hats. Bingo until mid-
night, cha-cha and rum punches until dawn. Hurry up
for breakfast, then three laps around the "B"
deck. The ship will dock in five minutes, and we'll
be in port for only an hour so enjoy all the
sights ashore and rush back by 10:15 or you'll
miss the boat. It doesn't sound like fun to us,
either. Which is why we've developed the
T/V Santa Maria Calm Cruise Plan ("T/V"
stands for "Turbo-vessel" which means
we're about the smoothest thing afloat).
Every month we sai I from Ft. Lauderdale's
Port Everglades, taking the calm Sun-
shine Route, and 27 days later we're
backhaving shown you such fabulous
ports of call as the Canary Islands, Ma-
deira, V'go, Lisbon, La Guaira and Cur-
acao. There you'il see the national flags
of Spain, Portugal, Venezuela and the
Netherlands Antilles. But aboard ship, the
queen of the Portuguese fleet, you'll find an
unhurried but never boring world of unmatched
cuisine and luxurious surroundings and very,
very pleasant people. If 27 days sounds like too
much time to rest, shop and sightsee, we can
show you how to sail one way and fiy the other.
Round-trip, first claf s rdatiens start at
$748; i 578. Your husband needs a
month's rest. You reed to shop the bargain markets of
and the u
Santa Maria
shaw company A division of luckenfoach Steamship Co., Inc.
AMERICA
Ihc Shall "501 N E. 1st Aw., Mliml, Fll. 33132 Th. (305) 371-4581
Picas* send me JOditiOPil InformittOfl on the I V Sent* Marie Celm Cruise Plani
TV
NAME
ADDRESS
CITY
.STATE
.ZIP-
Country ol Registry Portugal
MAIL TO S"W COMPANY, DEPT. C. 501 N E. 1st AVE.. MIAMI, FLA. 33131

Page 8-B
+Jentst'fk)r*&>r
Friday, January 29, 1971
II h^U...U'lHI***' : i-*.1
.
GBBAT GBEAX
What's great? A greatgrandma and a s'"and-
pa. of caurse. Mr. and Mrs. Barry Burd just came
back Horn Wood'and Hills, Calif., showing off a
picture of their first grvat-grandchild. The pic-
ture WM token law day alter the birth of toon
Hayes Broth, son o! Dr. and Mrs. Gene Both.
Are they proud?
BRAVO!BRAVO-
The applause was tremendous at a musicale
hosted by Mr. tnd Mrs. Cap! Ascher in their
new home on Collins Avenue. Performers re
Aaron Ascher, c inccrt pianist of Chicago, Gusdo
Leoni, violin virtuoso, Dr. Edmund t'.e. i, M
Opera Guild tenor Renato Renzl of Rom.- and his
charming wif< Moni |Ue, wno accompanied him
at the piano. Amo^: the guests were Mrs Guido
Leoni, Mrs. Aaron Ascher, Miss Laura Maltag-
liati. Mrs. Florence Kupperxnan, Mr. and Mrs.
William Apfel, Mrs. Suzanne Levy. Larry Aseh r,
Mr. and Mrs. Sici iey Koopman, Mr. and Mrs.
Seymoui R^th and Mrs. Ruth Sandberg.
NOW THKV ARK MARRIED
Juaith Ruth Spakowskl of Massachusetts and
Edward Yanowitz, v.ho were wed List Sunday,
are now on their way to San Francisco, Calif.,
where Edward has b
Institute of San Francisco, ir. a camper. His wife
will be with him while he goes to school. Edward
is the son of William and Gladys Yanowitz of
Miami and Nassau. The newlyweds took many
happy memories with them of the whole week
of parties that were held for them before the
wedding. Mrs. Irving Rothmin had a brunch at
the Ocean Pavilion. Among the guests were Mrs.
Leon Ell. Mrs. David Levin, Mrs Samuel Orltt,
Mrs. Ralph Cob-, Mrs. Sidney Gans. Mrs. Max
Spero and Mrs. Inez Krenskef. It wasn't really
a shower, but everyone brought gifts. And after
they were duly exclaimed over, there was time
for a game of cards. Mrs. Leon Shrago hosted a
dinner at tho Carriage House; Mr. and Mrs. Max
Feinberg had a dinner for the happy pair at
Gattis and another di iit-htful dinner was given
by Mr. and Mrs. Simon Wolff at the Embers.
BATING, ALWAYS EATING!
Where do you sec pcopl"? Eating mostly!
aces
Especially on a Sunday night at Fun Fair on "9th
St. Causeway. Mrs. Maurice Weinstcin. Mrs.
Harry Botwick and Mrs. Paul Sobel stopped to
get a bite or. their way to Mrs. Sam Resnick's
to play bridge. (It wasn't a small bite either
it looked like-they each had two hot-dogs*. Dave
and Miriam Bass were there With their grand-
children, Judy and Ronnie, whose parents, Ron
and Susan Albert, stayed at home to wateh the
football game. Niety Gerson was sitting at the
eni of one tab'e. h< husband Gary at the
other aid; the kids between turned out to be
their own three, Pamela. Denise and Milissa,
and David and Lore, the children of Mr. and Mrs.
Mel LeSSe. Then there was another big table
with Robert and Myrna Somerstein and Mrs
Rose Gordon and the three young Somersteins,
Scott .Van. and Michael and their friend. Bruce,
son of Leonard and Ansheila Turkel. Lots of hot
dogs, lots of french fries and kids all over the
place!
REMEMBER IUBBI.ES?
She is now Mrs. Julius Drossln the wife of
the chairman of the Music Department at Cl ve-
land State University, living in Cleveland, Ohio.
On a busy street she was abducted, robbed, held
at gunpoint and threatened with assault and
death. But it doesn't surprise her many friends
here that she got away with little effort with her
gift of gab. She sweet talked the two men into
abandoning her and her car. "I-ook" she said. "I
have children who arc coming home from school
and I have a dinner party for ton to prepare.
Let's cut this out." So they got out of the car
and after a session with the police. Bubble" went
home and had company for dinner as she had
planned. That's our Bubbles! She's coming down
with her husband in March for a visit. By then
who knows what further exciting adventures she
will have had.
Col. Conn Named To
i.
Leadership Post
Col Arthur Conn, executive vice
presidi nt of the Temple Beth Am
Brotherhood, has been named as-|
, ., : chairman ol the
1071 Bi ih Am Forum Series com.
mittee. Col. Conn- ..;;..,ntvnen'
rh announced by Barton Udell,
: the South Dade con-
gregat
Col Conn will co P ,lls
or Beth Am'! seventh annual
forum with Go aid Schv rti
Dr. Lcona d Lewish,
. -i a mi b r ol the
boa i of : n svra-
Col. >
ilcr in tin Ji *h VV
rans ol th I St '''''"l
. ,u ..i. ,\ |, l i B inda and
' '
Dr, .' k Hotfn n
.,. (! iirm in, '1" d
epted the post of patron
chairni n Bid Ed R lurw was in-
oinl nan. 1
Herbert Baum tard, rabbi of the
I
congregation for l"i years.Brth.
series consultant.
B iyard Rustin exi ciiti\ + -
t ,r of the A. Philip Randolph 1
itiinle and on* Ol the :^r ,
most Black modi rate*, c ...
iunniste ""d civil rights .
ip, ns the Beth Am s. rid
Othe-s who v- !1 take jm-1 H-
\lh it Vorspbft, d'reptor t;
he ivi'i >nal Commission on S..
\ 'ti in of th 1'i.Mn y\ \ n
.-m ll. '-r-w Congregatlonx
.. ak M ii It i: and i. th.
I '. I' "h i\\ Kutpo;-
. i ii the .'"' ii !
the countrj lost
,:., rymi n, Kp I! '. in : Is-
,-
;,,, ceiehr it ion Iscai ; I
Day M-y P
T ck. 's ire avails) k at
\ mi office, or rnav he <
fr >m any of the forum sera -
mitti members.
Spinoza Foram Lecture Schedule Is Announced
j-rance*
XJu

Hope School Luncheon And Fashion Show
Hope School, a non-profit, non-
cectarian school for mentally re-
tarded children and young adults
which was establish) d in Miami
nore than 15 years ago, will be
the beneficiary of the gala fashion
show and luncheon to bi held ia
the Fontaintbleau Hotel's Grand
Ballrooms Tuesday K >b. 2.
2,00 > ; rs men as
. as worm n ai I to
i tti nd this event, hi [hlight of
the social season which will fea-
ture Barbara Walters of the "To-
day" show as special guest.
An author and lecturer as well
as TV personality, Miss Walters,
who int. rviewed larai l's Premier
Golda Meir not long ago, will pre-
sent her view ol mental retarda-
tion, and friends of Hope School
will be entertained in a ballroom
transformed into a "Fairyland of
Fantas) "
Theme of the fifth annual luncheon
to benefit Hope School, 660 SW
4th St.. will be "Hope's Happy
Holiday Happenings," with one
important holiday in each month
of the year providing the decora-
tion theme.
Tickets may be obtained by call-
Lng the school, which is dedicated
to the progri ssive i ducation and
training of both resident and .la\
school students, and has long bei n
recognized as one ol the finest
schools in the United States for
th" mentally retarded.
Th.' February lecture schedule
ot th. Spinoza Forum for Adult
Education has been announced by,
Dr. Abraham Wolfs >n. who founded
the year-round, Thursday morning
study group, which meets at the
Washington Federal Auditorium.
1234 Washington Ave., under the
chairmanship .t Thomas Davidofl
and Raphael Burst, in.
Rabbi Milton Schlinsky will Ix-
the speaker at 10 a.m. Thin-i.e.
Feb. 4. His topic will be "Thi I''
portanci of One." The Hebrew
University" will be Mrs. Edith
Sisterhood Games
The Sisti-rho.il ot Ahavat Sha-
lom Congregation will hold a fund-
raising "games night" in the social
hall of the temple, 985 SW 67th
Ave.. beginning at B p.m. Saturday
and a similar event at the same
location at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The congregation's Youth Club In-
vites boys and girls 13 to 15 years
to att nd its 6:45 p.m. Sun
When the entrance of the Miami Beach
raw Home for the Aged was dedicated
in memoiy of Mrs. Jeanne Zuckerman, an
active member of the Home for many years,
Harry Zuckerman unveiled an original paint-
ing of his beloved wife, which will hang
permanently in the entrance lounge. The
photo taken after the dedication shows.
from left, (seated) Mrs. Michele Zuckerman,
Mrs. Zuckerman's daughter-in- law, her
mother, Mrs. Dora Weiss; (standing) son, Ira
Zuckerman, daughter, Vickie Rosenbnum,
Rabbi Sol Landau, Harry Zuckerman, Mit-
chell Sirgany, and son-in-law, Walter
Rosenbaum.
(tiger's topic on Fib. 11;. R..I i
Stanley Uingler. HUle-l director it
the University of Miami Will .! --
CUM Jewish Youth on t>
Campuses" Fetfc IS: Feb. 25, Hr.
Jack Capchan. fsycauMffist, will
peak on The New Gn
and the did."
I
(Arts and Craft.** dosses
| Grove House School of Alts and
(rafts uill Offer courses ir. wav-
ing, creative st:trhery.-neel> ;
I ceramics, sculpture, rleeon.-'
I papier mache, blfUUiaMllrj^
try and metal welding as sve
I s." veral classes In painting
i various media, it ha !> ~r\ an-
'nouneed. InstriH-tors will
Ed Weyhe. Jayn VPells, S*Wi
I stock. Sharon Timinons, Car
Howe. Rhoda Hanvr, Al Si
j Magda de Moreno. Rosara
'Allister. Milton t.ieh* rmar^ '
j Harris, Juan ChV>o8 Gonv- i
ole Garrison, Hugh DutnoTit \
of age to attend ns B: p.m sun-. aiv BiU ,-:, ni:ni.r. S|
dav meetings at the Shul. Sharon;* ,, ,
Zahs may be contacieu for further .Mrs. Chew, Susan BerlM W 1
information.
\ramescu
Barbcrn V.'alte.^ c! the NBC "Today Shew >wn
she interviewed G Israel's i'-..-.:.c Mini
rcce:..'. .
f-f -j0|- fM *tlBktf'^
T'.e Great S!D0R DEIARSKY wWl 100 On Stag*
SHfAUEL FERSHKO, Composer, with Zimrah Chorus
- Symphonette Sat. Feb. 20th, 8 P.M., M. 8. AudHorhii
TickciS ct Auditorium
CREATIVE
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SPECIALIZING /V MOVING TO ISRAEL.
Also Local, Lono Distance Movino. Packinn. Crating Storage
FREF ESTIMATES ON lONG DISTANCE MOVING Call 635-6554
and ask to speak to Esther Berlin.
ABE VAN LINES INC. 2136 N.W. 24th Avenue
buttons. They carried bouquets 'I
pale pink carnations.
The bridal party included She. i
Goldman, maid of honor. Shu
Greene, matron of honor: FqbbcI
Berkowit/. Geri Berkowit/. Ha
Reitcr, Cheryl Josepher. Jackie I'. I
mond and Doric pdmond, brid
maids; Stephen Greene, best n.
Edward Braverman. Richard B
vn man. Barry Greene. Jack I
man. Robert Goldman and Roi i
Loupus, ushers.
After a New York State hon
moon, the couple wil be at I
at 1515 San Remo, Coral Gabl.
MR. and MRS. GEORGE KOTfN
Kotins Celebrate
50th Anniversary
In Miami Beach this weekend
to help George and Gertrude Kotin
celebrate thi ir 50th wedding anni-
..rsary arc their three attorney
sons: Merritt R.. Lawrence I-.
and Gabriel c... the daughter, Lois,
. teacher and executive, grand-
children Suzanne. Betsy, Michael.
David and Daniel, a sister, Ksthcr
?houi brother, Lou, and s:ster-in-
aw Helen.
: i, Kotins, who met in high
ichool ri 1914, were married Jan.
10. 1921. and Lived in Chicago until
;ir;^, v.h. n Mr. Kotin retired from
Sis law practice and they moved to
Miami Beach.
Mr. Kotin, a member of the
Decalogui Society of Lawyers, is
, .-..chairman of Forte Towers'
Combined Jewish Appeal campaign
and retiring president of its Men's
Social Cluh. He i< incoming presi-
li ni of Maccabee Lodge. B'nai
l-.'rith and serves as parliamen-
aiian ol the Greater Miami Presi-
Icnte' Club.
Sisterhccd Dinner Set
M -- ,m I'' rtin pn silent .f
B h '- -ii si-'- ; i hns
ounced tl I la iisi "-
... .; tainment w '.' i ik i
,S t fi p.m, in the
i ..... S:nc th
t is i
ausBajas-Jssau>^t^*suz'3S^arv
LEO HOHAUSEH
PLUMBING
CONTgACT'M KPMM9
Servmn De^' Co.-nt* 0*tr 25 YtOM
1811 S.V/. Kth SY. HI 6^04
MhS. ARNOLD E. GREENE
ducted by Rabbi Sol I.andau and
Rabbi Solomon Schiff in the Xa- I
(Kjleon Room ol" tile DcauvilU ;
Hotel, Miami Beach.
The daughter of Dr. and Mrs. .
t.eo Braverman, 32M SW 18th St..
the new Mrs. Gretnc is a stud, nt
at the University nt Miami. Her
hiLsband. the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Greene. 1455 N. Treasure
Dr.. North Bay Village, attended
Florida Atlantic University, where
he was president of the Jewish
Student Union, vice pnsident of
the Fencing Club and s< cretary of
the Karate Club. He us presently
serving as office manager of Don
Greene Provisions.
The bride chase a gown of can.
dlelignt satin and pcau-de-angi
lace with fitted bodice, mandarin
co'lar, long sleeves and an A-linc
skirt trimmed with lace and seed
pearls. Her attendants' dresses
wen fashioned of hot pink chiffon
with empire A-line bodice, ruffled
] wedding band neck and xagger-
lated bishop sleeves with wide
cuffs trimmed with pale pink satin
May Nuptials For
Marsha S. Conlton.
Stecen Shnlltnan
M.- and Mrs. Isadore J. '"
ton. 1424 SW 17th T:-r.. annoui
the engagement of their daughti
Marsha Sue to Steven Jay Shuil
man. son of Mrs, Bernice Shull-
man. 8335 SW 72nd Ave., and
late Harry Shullman, former i-..-.
dents of Pittsburgh, Pa.
The bride-elect graduated wit
honors from Miami Senior H
School and is currently attendiri
Miami-Dado Junior College. li
she will receive her Associati
Arts degree. The granddaughtei I
Mrs. Eva Taub and Abraham ('
hen. of Miami Beach, she plan .
career leading to the professional
designation of Chartered Life U
derwritcr as well as professio
designations in the acturial sci-
ences.
The prospective bridegm
graduated from Miami ("oral P
': Senior High School. M'ami-I1
Junior College and the University
of Miami. While studying at lh(
University of Miami, he ivas
active memh i of Dell i S gma Pi
business fraternity in which
hc'.d Ihe offices of treasurer Bnd
onio' vice pres'dent. He receivori
his Bachi lor of Business Adminls
(ration degree with a ma,V>r
\ccountin". and is currently wo
ing toward his C.P.A. certific '
Steve, tii rrandson of Mr.
Mrs. G. H. Sleeal of Mismi. i.-
ploved with i national C.P.A. f
The nwHtng is scheduled to t
place In May.
I
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The Honey Pkva. 2JrJ ct Cvllins. Miami Beach. Flortde

Page 10-B
*Jewist fkridfioin
Friday. January 29, 1971
Contest Winners
Awarded Prizes
Miami Jackson High School win-
ners i [rd annual Brothi r-
hood Posti r Cont si received their
prizes al a recent school assembly.
Similar prizes were awarded al
Miami Krlison Senior High School
this w< k.
Winners at Jackson were Carl
Lattmore, 17. first prtae ($25 U.S.
Savings Bond) Janett Botz, IS.
Bccond prise rtrophyl Linda Mc-
Call. IT, third prize (certificate <>f
I merit i and Robert l'ortor Jr., 1".
(certificateof honorable mention'.
The contest is sponsored by Nor-
man Bruce Brown Post No. 171.
The question of skirt lengths is you'll know ho*, to anticipate j^^h \\-ar Veterans of the U.S.A.
Bill To Authorize Medical
Training Program Proposed
still being debated in some circles, your wardrobe planning.
In response to questioning by
Mrs. Bernard Mandler and Mrs.
Mort >n (> t/. let me state that
the fashion trend-setters of Bur-
Mrs, Ronald Milmed asked ifi A special trophy will be awarded
there "ill be a change in make-up to the school judged to have sub-
trends to go al >ng with the eh inges
in clothing. Yes, th c ometic in-
ope ha\e finally lecltted on theI dustry is responding to the change
i igth of skirts. The coming I in the fashion industry. The heavy
S| ing and Summer collections m ike-up is out it's a fresher
show most daytime wear at two look with dark glossy shades
inch* s > '. i h kni -. (' stumc foi I
, mb'.es ford y re it the mid- To insw r Mrs. Milmed with a
mitted the best group of posters
at the annual Brotherhood pro-
gram sjxmsoml by the Post and
its Ladies Auxiliary in Pythian
Hall, 4601 W. Flakier St.. Tues-
day. Feb. 16. The winning posters
will also lx- put on display in the
lobby of the Pan American Bank
I cockteil wear is the cosmetic authority we quote Pablo, of Miami. 3rd Avenue and SW
longuettf length i above the leth Arden: "A too-natu-
nnkv For evening, it's the maxi ," so he said,
;th. is a rfecte l one Ii needs Imagi-
(>., of B nd color." He sees a si
First Street.
Edwin I.. Felbelman, Post Quar-
termaster, serves as chairman of
\ entino, cla I the troi r lids htei the Brotherhood program: I ost
1h., :r y women a Hi very dark Commander is Leonard S, Davte,
w the length can be unal es- and Mrs. Mae Schrelber is presi-
- clue to th fact that thej
h i't yet ad lo the dif-
The h!q
i
Is the typas o
and tunics,
Val ntino i- in his
thougl lion, skirl
ally fron a man's poinl t ol the Auxiliary.
. .'.. "\Vh iv no ith
look Itl :
v I not
vder with i n
\ iu'11 he
th or panl What this n>
i< that in about o y< ir from i M P > Goldii
i for our fashion time I the organl ation, announces,
lag we will be wearing longei i wan** to ,, ., ., ,,.; aa
sktrti anddi Pants I v. Mr* Henry Stern i^ serving a
, >, chairman of the event, proceeds ol
return to thi r place in sports t shion. ,, ,,,,.. ,,,.
wear collections I which will go towards the scholar-
attire. > ire the ship fl11111 which underwrites the
Not ..... post of educating some 78S of the
'' !' the lo s. B"n goo students enrolled.
Essen still p has been
Hebrew Academy Women
Sponsor 'Games Night'
A -gan 18 night" will i
s red by the Hebrew A'
n m the school's Max Silver-
b. rg I'n.ii 8 Roi n Monday at 8
p.m. Mrs. I., onard Adi i
Florida's Senat Oommittee on
H th, Welfare anil Institutions
troductjd a bill authorizing
the establishment of a "physici in's
Mant' program.
"The purpose of this bill,'' said
Dade's Sen. Kenneth M. Myers,
committee chairman, "is t i en-
courage the more effective utili-
Htion ot the skills of physicians
by enabling them to delegate h >alth
care las^s to qualified physician's
assistants where such delegation
is consistent with the patient's
health and well ir< ."
The physician's assistant will be
required to take an approved
course in medical procedures, and,
when directly supervised by a
physician, will be authorized to
perform certain delegated me
sasks relating to the routine as-
pects of the practice of medxine.
Testimony at the committee
i hearing revealed thai
ent fine five Florida counties h
i no resident physicians, eighl i
i
c unities have n > peditrlcians .
The new i.ct. ;: ipp "o>
in w .11 n |uir I I
rd Mod Exa
p training |

J
Fridcy, January 29, 1971
+Jcnii$lf: fkrtdlcijn
Page 11-3
'Y' Tour Group Offers To
Take Recorded Messages
'I ho Y.\l-"i WH V of ter Mf-
i i" all par-
ti i may h and
I :,". an i -in'!;, ing
i -: iel ii attend mi I
i In the G lden
V :,., im ol the "^ SW
>.-.. '
"
the id
Sch inberg, t mr a
Par- n\e ill l) able mak i re-
i r child
and I notes ol i st 1 'i
v. fee Y
I -(" nformi-
t ioi
the v."
\ ...
;
pi "- n Isr
v it a 12:13
l meet
* of th" G'eitT Mi-
ami area at the V Thurs I y.
Feb I.
Mr. Leor, wh m ill ; ik to high
school students and their parents
: it ai B: 15 p.m. m teting at the
"Y," will be discussing the Israeli
\ mth progi mi. for te -i.-. iges I I-
is. which are available the sum-
mer of 1971.
M r Leor' ippi arance at the
y.m-ywha o:' Greater Miami is
another In the series of Jewish
leaders concerned with youth and
Jewish life being made available
through the American Zionist
Youth Foun laUofl and c immunity
sii iliach pr igram a ordinated by
the YM-YWKA and Gre il Miami
ih Federal
W rlnesdaj it B:15 pm. Mr
Leo at the N >rth (' im-
Ml mi:-! '
I
,i,. i ,
i '
i | | will h